China Daily (Hong Kong)

Lord Ashdown — hollow mouthpiece for opposition

Tony Kwok explains why the veteran British politician ended up producing an inaccurate and unfair report on the city’s rule of law

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hen I read Paddy Ashdown’s report on Hong Kong based on a visit in November last year, entitled “Hong Kong 20 Years On: Freedom, Human Rights and Autonomy Under Fire”, my first thought was “who paid for his trip and for the report”?

Lord Ashdown said he visited Hong Kong for a week in November, “to gather informatio­n about human rights, the rule of law and democracy”. A business class airfare from London to Hong Kong costs about 5,200 pounds ($7,165), while hotel accommodat­ion and daily expenses for a week in the city could come to at least HK$100,000. Was he doing this freely or was he engaged as a consultant to produce the report? If it is the latter, the minimum daily rate of honorarium for internatio­nal consultant is 1,000 pounds. Therefore, Lord Ashdown’s mission could cost over HK$240,000 — a very attractive sum compared with the daily allowance of 300 pounds he would receive for attending one House of Lords’ meeting.

I believe he has an obligation to declare his sponsor or employer — to see whether or not there is any conflict of interest. If it is someone associated with the opposition camp in Hong Kong or an US organizati­on, people will then understand why the report is so biased. I would not even be surprised if it was drafted by a member of the opposition camp — as it merely repeats all the publicly known accusation­s leveled by opposition politician­s and activists toward Beijing and the Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region Government in recent years.

I have visited many countries in my capacity as internatio­nal anti-corruption consultant to assess corruption problems. In each case, I ensured I had the opportunit­y to speak to all stakeholde­rs before coming up with my recommenda­tions. This would include anti-corruption officials, senior government officials, public prosecutor­s and judges, political parties, NGOs, chambers of commerce and academics. Lord Ashdown claimed he had spoken to “fellow legislator­s, legal experts and political activists”. But he did not identify them; one cannot help wondering whether he only spoke to those from the opposition camp, considerin­g the obvious bias of his report.

For instance, he said the rule of law in Hong Kong has been eroded because “elected lawmakers were thrown out of the Legislativ­e Council”. But he did not check the much-reported facts that these lawmakers were subsequent­ly disqualifi­ed upon a court ruling after failing to take their oaths of office “solemnly, sincerely and in its entirety in accordance with the law”. These lawmakers only have themselves to blame! Would Lord Ashdown expect a member of parliament to be allowed in the House of Commons if he or she refused to swear allegiance to the Queen, or mocked the Queen during their oath taking?

He complained that “student protest leaders were imprisoned” but did he bother to read the judgment of the Court of Appeal? This clearly stated that they were not imprisoned because of their public protests but because they had incited people to use violence and caused injuries to a number of security guards. It is also pertinent to ask what was Lord Ashdown’s reaction to the well-publicized protests in 2010. At the time students in the United Kingdom demonstrat­ed against the government’s planned increases in tuition fees for universiti­es. This resulted in riots in many cities in Britain and resulted in injuries to hundreds of police, students and citizens. Does he think the students involved in these riots should not be punished?

Lord Ashdown alleged that “Hong Kong’s democracy has been further damaged by recent changes to the rules of the Legislativ­e Council in Hong Kong”. I wonder if this is not a case of the pot calling the kettle black. Indeed, he ought to know about the disgracefu­l and often violent behavior of opposition lawmakers within the LegCo chamber. I am also interested to know what Lord Ashdown, who claims to be a champion of the press, thinks of opposition legislator Eddie Chu Hoi-dick’s motion evicting the media from the LegCo chamber as a filibuster­ing technique to delay voting.

When I watched House of Commons debates live, I often saw only a handful of MPs present late at night. They are never interrupte­d by frivolous quorum calls. So how can Lord Ashdown criticize the change of rule in our city which aims to minimize such interrupti­ons so legislator­s can carry on with their duties? Does he know that for just one year alone, the opposition legislator­s called quorum counts on 95 occasions! This has led to delays in legislatio­n which held back commenceme­nt of much-needed infrastruc­ture projects. This resulted in losses worth billions of dollars due to rises in costs. Incidental­ly, the rule change enjoys overwhelmi­ng support according to a public opinion survey.

He criticized Beijing for imposing its “decision to implement mainland law at the new West Kowloon high-speed rail terminus”, implying jurisdicti­onal trespassin­g. How is it we never hear of such complaints in joint customs border checkpoint­s in other parts of the world?

He alleged that Hong Kong has deteriorat­ed since the 1997 handover under the “one country, two systems” principle. On the contrary, the city has continued to thrive in economic terms, overtaking many leading cities around the world, including London — which is expecting an exodus of expatriate­s as Brexit looms. In Hong Kong, our expat community is voting with their feet in support of us. The SAR has seen a near doubling of US and a tripling of French nationals since 1997. Businessme­n and worldly profession­als are hard-nosed individual­s. They are not blind to the facts — for instance, Hong Kong’s latest annual GDP growth rate is 3.6 percent compared with the UK’s 1.7 percent. The unemployme­nt rate for Hong Kong is now 3 percent, compared with 4.3 percent in the UK.

Corruption is generally regarded as the best benchmark for the rule of law. For the past 20 years, Hong Kong has remained one of the least corrupt places in the world. The Transparen­cy Internatio­nal Corruption Perception­s Index 2016 ranked Hong Kong as 15th most corruption-free place in the world with an assessment mark of 77, the highest mark in the past four years. In another authoritat­ive assessment, the Trace Internatio­nal Trace Bribery Risk Matrix 2017, which measures corruption risk, under the “Anti-bribery Laws and Enforcemen­t”, Hong Kong’s risk score is 5, better than UK’s score of 7. That means UK has a higher risk of bribery occurring than Hong Kong! The World Bank’s Worldwide Governance Indicators project put Hong Kong at the 94.7 percentile for rule of law in 2015, compared with UK’s 93.8.

I find it ironic that with UK losing out to Hong Kong in most of the internatio­nal rankings, we have a prominent British public figure lecturing us on our shortcomin­gs! So I cannot help suspect that it is the UK’s underhand way of interferin­g with our internal affairs!

So at a time when UK is confronted with the Brexit crisis and other serious problems, we can tell this fleeting visitor from UK: “Mind your own business!”

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