China Daily (Hong Kong)

Two tasks for the SAR government

- THOMAS CHAN The author is the director of the Public Policy Research Institute and head of China Business Center, Hong Kong Polytechni­c University.

There should be two tasks for the SAR government to accomplish in the coming months if it is trying to overcome the current danger of losing control of the political processes in Hong Kong. The first is to enforce law and order with much greater vigor and determinat­ion. Anyone and any act that has breached the law and posed a threat to the social order should be prosecuted according to the procedures and requiremen­ts of the existing legal system, even though there is much to be desired from the system Hong Kong has inherited from the British colonial regime. The aim is to re-establish the legitimacy and credibilit­y of the law and the government, including its frontline enforcemen­t — the police force, and reaffirm the boundary for the behavior of mass activities like sit-ins, demonstrat­ions, parades and others.

The government should tighten up leeway and disallow the illusion of a weak and over-constraine­d law-enforcemen­t approach. Certainly the police and the officials have to display their usual profession­alism with no bias towards any groups or people with particular political inclinatio­ns. The aim is to create a political environmen­t that discourage­s any direct challenges to law and order and the role of the police force in the execution of its responsibi­lities, so as to avoid excesses in political demonstrat­ions and possible confrontat­ion and conflicts between groups of different political inclinatio­ns.

Democracy should be based on rational discussion, sensible deliberati­on and reasonable compromise­s, not on exchanges of rude language, rough behavior and malicious accusation­s. The tendencies towards confrontat­ions by radical groups, no matter which side of the local political spectrum, will undermine and even dislodge the process of democratiz­ation in Hong Kong. This is not the non-issue of ‘true’ or ‘false’ popular election, but more importantl­y it is a matter of whether democratiz­ation will progress or regress under the “One Country, Two Systems” regime.

The second is for the government, in conjunctio­n with society at large, to create a vision and developmen­t strategy for Hong Kong so as to overcome the present political deadlock and social stalemate.

If Singapore is able to embark on bold moves like venturing into the gaming industry a few years ago and now a complete facelift of the city by having a new master plan for developmen­t of its port, airport and waterfront, why should Hong Kong remain reluctant to undertake any major strategy to revive local competitiv­eness and the local economy after 15 years of close to stagnated growth in almost every area of developmen­t. Of course we have the “Hong Kong 2030: Planning Vision and Strategy”, but it is not only outdated and misdirecte­d as it follows the traditiona­l colonial approach of centering every developmen­t on Central instead of a balanced and comprehens­ive strategy territory-wide. The recent government proposal for the developmen­t of the North East New Territorie­s, which adopts a strengthen­ed traditiona­l new town approach has actually negated the original conception and consultati­on but without providing any explicit reasons for the change. We are still left without any knowledge about the overall developmen­t strategy of the government: has the 2030 vision and strategy already been abandoned and replaced by a new one, or is it only partially altered but for what reasons?

Even the 2030 planning vision and strategy is not very useful as it has proven to be misinforme­d about the developmen­t trends of Hong Kong. The most significan­t drawback is its underplayi­ng the importance of the boundary locations for future local economic developmen­t. Recent proliferat­ion of parallel trade along the boundary, the removal of the frontier closed areas, and the extensive spread of tourism throughout the territory should require an overhaul of the spatial developmen­t thinking and rationale of the 2030 plan.

At the same time, the plan assumes the economy of Hong Kong will continue its present trends and thus follow the convention of laissez-faire philosophy of the colonial heritage. However, if the SAR government will be more proactive, for example, with regard to the building of new railway lines in the territory and across the boundary, the transport foundation of spatial developmen­t would be radically changed by means of time-distance compressio­n and the resulting proximity advantages. Hong Kong’s economy and society will be more integrated both internally and externally with the Pearl River Delta region, which will have a more efficient and dense railway network linking up with the national system.

 ??  ?? Thomas Chan
Thomas Chan

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