The Gold Coast Bulletin

World divided over HK’s new security law

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CHINA’S sweeping national security law for Hong Kong has sharply divided opinion both inside the financial hub and beyond its borders.

Beijing loyalists and China-friendly nations hailed it but many dissidents, rights groups and Western government­s decried it as the end of the city’s free speech traditions and judicial autonomy.

Ahead of the territory’s handover from Britain, authoritar­ian China guaranteed Hong Kong civil liberties — as well as judicial and legislativ­e autonomy — until 2047 in a deal known as “One Country, Two Systems”.

Hong Kong’s pro-Beijing leader, Carrie Lam, on Wednesday described the security law as “the most significan­t developmen­t” since the handover. Beijing said the law was a “sword” that would hang over the heads of lawbreaker­s after a year of huge, often violent pro-democracy protests.

On Wednesday, Zhang Xiaoming, deputy of Beijing’s Hong Kong office, described threats of sanctions by foreign countries as “gangster logic”. He added Beijing could have simply applied mainland law had it wanted to abandon “One Country, Two Systems”.

Criticism poured in from

Hong Kong’s pro-democracy figures. The Democratic Party said the law marked the end of “One Country, Two Systems” and “completely destroyed Hong Kong’s judicial independen­ce”.

The Labour Party feared dissidents would share the fate of those on the mainland frequently jailed under Beijing’s national security laws.

The Civic Party said the legislatio­n replaced “rule of law” with “rule of men”. “This rule of terror might create a false appearance of controlled social order, but it completely loses Hong Kong people’s hearts,” the party said.

“Today marks a sad day for Hong Kong, and for freedom-loving people across China,” US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said after the law was passed.

“(China) promised 50 years of freedom to the Hong Kong people, and gave them only 23,” he said, adding further US countermea­sures would be announced.

Washington previously announced Hong Kong no longer had sufficient autonomy from the mainland to justify special trade privileges.

Britain described the law as a “grave step” and “deeply troubling” but said it needed more time to determine if Beijing has breached its “One Country, Two Systems” promise. Prime Minister Boris Johnson previously offered to extend visa rights to millions of Hong Kongers if the law was pushed through.

Chris Patten, the last colonial governor of Hong Kong, called the law “the end” of “One Country, Two Systems”.

Twenty-seven countries, including Britain, France, Germany, Australia and Japan, issued a rare oral rebuke of China at the UN Human Rights Council, describing “deep and growing concerns” over the new law.

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