Cape Breton Post

Hong Kong’s leader says security law opponents are enemies of the people

- CLARE JIM CAROL MANG

HONG KONG — Hong Kong leader Carrie Lam on Tuesday urged opponents of Beijing’s plan to impose national security legislatio­n in the financial hub to stop “smearing” the effort, saying those who did were “the enemy of the people”.

Beijing last month announced a plan to introduce legislatio­n in Hong Kong to tackle secession, subversion, terrorism and foreign interferen­ce. The law could see Chinese security agencies set up bases in the city for the first time.

Critics see the law as the most serious threat to a “one country, two systems” formula, agreed when the former British colony returned to Chinese rule in 1997 to protect its freedoms and role as a global financial centre.

The Chinese government and Lam’s Beijing-backed city administra­tion say the law will not curtail freedoms and will only target a small number of “troublemak­ers” and help bring stability after a year of antigovern­ment protests.

“I urge opponents who still use the usual tactics to demonize and smear the work to stop because by doing this they become the enemy of the Hong Kong people,” Lam said before a cabinet meeting, referring to the legislatio­n.

“The vast majority want to restore stability, and have safety, satisfacti­on and employment.”

The government has mounted a campaign to rally public support for the legislatio­n, with billboards, a booklet with questions and answers and a video of Lam defending the law “in the public interest”.

In the video, posted on the government’s website, Lam decried a “terrorist threat” against a “traumatize­d” city, saying advocates of independen­ce were “colluding with foreign forces” and underminin­g security.

“Hong Kong has become a gaping hole in national security, and our city’s prosperity and stability are at risk,” said Lam as she stood flanked by the Chinese and Hong Kong flags, the first bigger than the second.

Only a few protesters have been calling for the city’s independen­ce, a suggestion that is anathema to China.

Another government clip posted online shows Hong Kong as a dot that is part of greater China on a map made up of many dots, with the message: “Without a country, there is no family” and “Upholding national security, duty of every citizen”.

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Lam’ s latest defence of the law came a year after Hong Kong’s biggest ever demonstrat­ion, when about 2 million people, according to organisers, marched against another bill the city wanted to introduce that would have allowed extraditio­ns to mainland China.

Critics saw that bill as a threat to judicial independen­ce and although it was later withdrawn, protests broadened into a campaign for greater democracy and clashes with police intensifie­d.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam holds a news conference in Beijing, China.
REUTERS Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam holds a news conference in Beijing, China.

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