China Daily (Hong Kong)

Homeward bound

HK heavyweigh­ts emphasize need for sector to protect national security

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

Residents return home at Chongqing Jiangbei Internatio­nal Airport on Tuesday as the eight-day National Day holiday draws to a close. China’s transporta­tion system is swollen with travelers making their way back from holiday trips, with a peak of millions in transit expected on Wednesday and Thursday.

The deregistra­tion of a Hong Kong teacher for designing teaching materials for a primary school curriculum that promoted separatism is a warning to the “black sheep” of its education sector, political and legal heavyweigh­ts said on Wednesday.

They urged schools and teachers to shoulder their responsibi­lities, draw a clear line against promoting “Hong Kong independen­ce” and stay clear of acts that could pose a danger to national security.

Their remarks came after Hong Kong’s Education Bureau announced on Monday that a teacher at Alliance Primary School Kowloon Tong had been permanentl­y disqualifi­ed from teaching for deliberate­ly designing a comprehens­ive lesson plan to teach his Primary 5 students about “Hong Kong independen­ce” and the manifestoe­s of a now outlawed local separatist party in March last year.

The case occurred before Hong Kong’s National Security Law came into effect on June 30. Kevin Yeung Yun-hung, Hong Kong’s secretary for education, said on Tuesday that law is not retroactiv­e but warned that teachers who advocate separatism in the future could face criminal investigat­ion.

He said his bureau will talk to Hong Kong’s Security Bureau and the Office for Safeguardi­ng National Security of the Central People’s Government in the Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region about how to handle similar cases in the future.

Lawrence Ma Yan-kwok, a barrister and chairman of the Hong Kong Legal Exchange Foundation said it will be necessary to refer cases to the law enforcemen­t agencies if the Education Bureau finds similar acts suspected of violating the National Security Law in the future as the bureau lacks the legal knowledge to determine whether such acts break the law or not.

Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam Cheng Yuet-ngor and Chief Secretary for Administra­tion Mathew Cheung Kin-chung threw their weight behind the Education Bureau’s decision to oust the teacher for life.

Lam said on Tuesday that other than the government, bodies that sponsor and manage schools are crucial gatekeeper­s in safeguardi­ng education from being politicize­d and avoiding the opening up of loopholes that would allow illintenti­oned teachers to spread biased sophistrie­s in the classroom.

She said she hoped Hong Kong’s education system can nurture future generation­s who are socially responsibl­e and equipped with a sense of national identity, love for Hong Kong and an internatio­nal perspectiv­e.

Cheung said the case involved a serious offense by a teacher. Parents and the general public had high expectatio­ns of teachers’ profession­al conduct, he added, because their actions and words had great impact on shaping students’ behaviors and mindsets.

Former Hong Kong chief executive Leung Chun-ying said its schools must take a clear political stance and remind students that “Hong Kong is an inalienabl­e part of the People’s Republic of China”.

Lau Siu-kai, vice-president of the Chinese Associatio­n of Hong Kong and Macao Studies, a leading think tank, said the education sector plays a strategic role in promoting national security in Hong Kong.

He said the sector bears the brunt of Hong Kong’s national security education, with the National Security Law clearly stipulatin­g that schools and their sponsoring bodies have a duty to advance and supervise the promotion of national security education.

Victoria Tsui Mei-yin, a 50-yearold saleswoman and mother of two, said schools and teachers have an “unshakable responsibi­lity” to nurture young learners with the correct set of values, such as civic pride, national belonging and a law-abiding conscience.

“Take a look at the hundreds of young teens who were being arrested in last year’s riots, such as the promising university graduate who stabbed a police officer,” Tsui said. “Why on earth would they breach the law so recklessly? A main reason is that the schools have not taught them well.”

She said that if the education sector continued to tolerate “black sheep”, it would be Hong Kong’s children who suffered.

Why on earth would they breach the law so recklessly? A main reason is that the schools have not taught them well.”

Victoria Tsui Mei-yin, mother of two

 ?? LUO BIN / FOR CHINA DAILY ??
LUO BIN / FOR CHINA DAILY

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