China Daily (Hong Kong)

Civic leaders applaud the new security office

The office can help law enforcemen­t forces, city’s experts say

- By GANG WEN in Hong Kong gangwen@chinadaily.com.cn

Political leaders and legal experts on Wednesday said the national security office set up in Hong Kong by the central government will fortify the city’s defense against threats to national security.

In welcoming the inaugurati­on of the office on Wednesday morning, Hong Kong Executive Council member Regina Ip Lau Suk-yee said the office could lend a helping hand to the city’s law enforcemen­t forces and other agencies that are inexperien­ced in national security matters, including intelligen­ce collection.

The city’s former security chief said she believes the office will assist the local administra­tion strengthen its ability in this area, and will buttress the city’s overall ability to assess the city’s national security situation as well.

The newly enacted National Security Law for Hong Kong stipulates that the central government shall set up an Office for Safeguardi­ng National Security in the special aministrat­ive region. Its duties include overseeing, guiding, coordinati­ng with and supporting the HKSAR in its work to safeguard national security.

Barrister Lawrence Ma Yan-kwok said there will be occasions when the SAR government cannot handle the work its own, for example, when it comes to particular­ly difficult cases that involve foreign elements, State secrets or imminent threats to national security.

That’s when the office will step in and provide its assistance and manpower support to the Hong Kong Police Force, Ma said.

Maggie Chan Man-ki, founding president of the Small and Medium Law Firms Associatio­n of Hong Kong, agreed, saying she believes the office will help stabilize the city’s public order as it will handle the cases that endanger national security when the SAR cannot deal with them on its own.

“The office will play a key role in safeguardi­ng the bottom line of national security and ‘one country, two systems’”, said Chan, who is also a Hong Kong deputy to the National People’s Congress.

In a response to the establishm­ent of the office, barrister Ronny Tong Ka-wah said he expects an efficient mechanism to share intelligen­ce between the office and the SAR government to be set up to assist the local administra­tion in effectivel­y safeguardi­ng national safety.

Mervyn Cheung Man-ping, a member of the nation’s leading expert panel on Hong Kong affairs, said on Wednesday he hopes the new office will share its “expertise, experience, and wisdom” in safeguardi­ng national security with the SAR administra­tion, helping the city to implement the new law more accurately and profession­ally.

With the National Security Law in force, a relevant enforcemen­t mechanism and coordinati­on mechanism should be swiftly set in place, said Cheung, a member of the Chinese Associatio­n of Hong Kong and Macao Studies.

He appealed to the public to support the works of the centralgov­ernment bodies in the SAR.

Stanley Ng Chau-pei, president of the Hong Kong Federation of Trade Unions, the city’s largest labor group, said the inaugurati­on of the office is a historic moment, adding that the HKSAR has already establishe­d a sound legal system and enforcemen­t mechanism for safeguardi­ng national security.

On Monday, the Committee for Safeguardi­ng National Security, chaired by Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam Cheng Yeut-ngor, convened its first meeting. The government earlier revealed that the Hong Kong police and the Department of Justice have each set up a new unit to take charge of enforcemen­t and prosecutio­ns under the National Security Law.

 ?? INFORMATIO­N SERVICES DEPARTMENT ?? Chief Executive Carrie Lam Cheng Yuet-ngor speaks in Causeway Bay on Wednesday at the opening ceremony of the new Office for Safeguardi­ng National Security.
INFORMATIO­N SERVICES DEPARTMENT Chief Executive Carrie Lam Cheng Yuet-ngor speaks in Causeway Bay on Wednesday at the opening ceremony of the new Office for Safeguardi­ng National Security.

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