China Daily (Hong Kong)

Training of educators essential

Former LegCo president Rita Fan says teachers can get constituti­onal message to students

- By ELEANOR HUANG in Hong Kong eleanorhua­ng@chinadaily­hk.com

Front-line educators should be the first to digest pivotal concepts of national security and Hong Kong’s constituti­onal foundation, as they are tasked with passing on the knowledge to the students, said Rita Fan Hsu Lai-tai, a former president of the city’s Legislativ­e Council.

Fan is also chairperso­n of the management committee of the En de av our Education Centre, which is responsibl­e for providing such a training course for teachers, principals and school sponsoring bodies.

According to Article 10 of the National Security Law that came into effect on June 30, the Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region shall promote national security education in schools and universiti­es and through social organisati­ons, the media, the internet and other means to raise the awareness of Hong Kong residents of national security and of the obligation to abide by the law.

According to the Education Bureau’s website, the 18-hour training course, in collaborat­ion with the center, covers national security, the Constituti­on and the city’s Basic Law, as well as how the rule of law is maintained in the city.

These profession­al training courses for teachers serve as a key starting point to strengthen students’ respect for the rule of law as currently many teachers may have only scratched the surface of the nation’s Constituti­on and the city’s Basic Law, Fan said.

During the six sessions, which stretch over three days, Fan said a number of prominent speakers from Hong Kong and the Chinese mainland, who are experts in the Constituti­on, the Basic Law and the National Security Law, share their legal knowledge with the teachers. Discussion­s with the experts are also held.

Speakers include the first secretary for justice Elsie Leung Oi-Sie, Deputy Director of the Hong Kong Basic Law Committee Maria Tam Wai-chu, and Basic Law Committee member Priscilla Leung Mei-fun, according to the EDB website.

By giving the front-line teachers an opportunit­y to deepen their understand­ing of the city’ s constituti­onal framework, which an ordinary resident may find “rather complicate­d”, Fan said the objective of the courses is to build up teachers’ confidence. “So when they go into the classroom, then they would be able to explain things clearly and get the message across,” she said.

Other than profession­al training, Fan said a proper set of teaching materials is also of paramount importance. In her opinion, the teaching manual should be fun reading for the students, as well as provide an actual picture of the SAR’s constituti­onal relationsh­ip with the nation.

National security is an organic part of the training, highlighte­d by the city’s newly enacted National Security Law, which Fan said has restored public order.

She said people from all walks of life in Hong Kong are feeling safer and they have regained their freedom of speech and mobility rights.

“Particular­ly for the small business owners, who own a restaurant or small retail shop, they feel more secure now because their livelihood had been adversely affected by the vandalism, threatened by the rioting activities by the black-clad protesters,” she said.

Meanwhile, ordinary residents no longer need to live in fear of being beaten up while discussing politics on the streets, and drivers don’t have to worry about being caught in the roadblocks set up by radicals, Fan said. Changes can also be seen in prominent opposition figures, some of whom have even made a U-turn claiming that they never supported separatism, she said.

Opposition lawmakers are now no longer able to mislead voters that separatism is viable, she added.

On Monday, the government issued a formal notice to government department­s, requiring civil servants who joined after July 1 to sign a statement or take an oath to confirm they will uphold the Basic Law and swear allegiance to the HKSAR.

Fan said this is a perfectly natural procedure to remind new recruits that they should not do anything to undermine the SAR. She also slammed those who express doubts about it, saying they are “trying to make things difficult” without any reasonable grounds.

 ?? PARKER ZHENG /CHINA DAILY ?? Rita Fan Hsu Lai-tai, a former president of the city’s Legislativ­e Council, talks about national security issues in education.
PARKER ZHENG /CHINA DAILY Rita Fan Hsu Lai-tai, a former president of the city’s Legislativ­e Council, talks about national security issues in education.

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