China Daily (Hong Kong)

HK campuses must not tolerate the impermissi­ble

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Hong Kong separatist­s reared their heads on university campuses again in the past week, one year after separatist banners on the campus of the Chinese University of Hong Kong provoked widespread condemnati­on in the special administra­tive region last September. Carrie Lam Cheng Yuet-ngor, chief executive of the Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region, condemned the student union leaders at some local universiti­es after they greeted their teachers and fellow students on the first day of the new academic year with speeches filled with separatist references.

Attacking those using the university events as a platform to promote an “absurd” idea, she said that those advocating independen­ce were violating the Basic Law and that anything “that impacts the basic policy direction of ‘one country, two systems’ or the ‘bottom line’ mentioned by President Xi Jinping on July 1 last year — we will not tolerate”, referring to the red line he drew for relations between the mainland and Hong Kong at a gathering to celebrate the 20th anniversar­y of Hong Kong’s return to the motherland.

Any attempt to endanger national sovereignt­y and security, challenge the power of the central government and the authority of the Basic Law crosses a red line, and is “absolutely impermissi­ble”, he said.

On Wednesday, Deputy Director of the Hong Kong and Macao Affairs Office of the State Council Huang Liuquan reemphasiz­ed the central government’s zero-tolerance stance toward Hong Kong separatism.

Two decades after Hong Kong’s return to the motherland and the establishm­ent of the Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region, no one should have any doubt about the constituti­onal reality of Hong Kong — separatism is simply a non-issue in any rational discussion.

That campuses have been repeatedly exploited by attention seekers raising banners for “independen­ce” is unfair on the majority of students, who expect them to be places of study and research.

University administra­tors, while they may not wish to be considered to be using a heavy hand, should take effective measures to stop any advocacy of separatism on campus as they have a duty to uphold the Basic Law and create an environmen­t for learning.

Freedom of speech should be respected. But it should not be allowed to be abused.

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