China Pictorial (English)

Silver Lining of Hong Kong Restoring Order and Prosperity

It will function as a stabilizer that assures business owners of steady operations, builds investor confidence, enables citizens to live and work with no fear, and ensures smooth traveling for tourists.

- Text by Lin Yu

e have been looking forward to this [national security legislatio­n] for a long time,” said Fung Kuen-kwok, a doctor living in Yau Ma Tei area in Hong Kong. “I believe that after the completion of the legislatio­n, it will have a deterrent effect on violent elements and help the residents resume normal life and work.”

Fung is glad to hear that the third session of the 13th National People’s Congress (NPC), China’s top legislatur­e, would deliberate a draft decision on establishi­ng and improving the legal system and enforcemen­t mechanisms for the Hong Kong Special Administra­tive

Region (HKSAR) to safeguard national security. He noted that many of his neighbors and clients have been worried about their own safety due to rampant violence since the social unrest emerged in June last year. They are irritated, but hesitant to raise their voices.

Since the rioting and vandalism broke out last June, political groups advocating so-called “Hong Kong independen­ce” and local radical separatist­s have become increasing­ly rampant with escalating violence. The rioters have been caught attacking police officers in an organized manner and assaulting and beating up innocent citizens who hold different political views, causing tremendous chaos. During their demonstrat­ions and violent protests, radical protesters besieged and attacked the Liaison Office of the Central People’s Government, defaced the national emblem and national flag, openly challenged the authority and sovereignt­y of the central government, blatantly offended the national dignity, and challenged the bottom line of the “One Country, Two Systems” principle.

The social unrest is devastatin­g

Hong Kong’s economy and the residents’ livelihood­s. Hong Kong has slipped in several rating agencies’ rankings with investment, catering business, retail sales and more other sectors being hard hit and big-name shops closing. According to the HKSAR government, Hong Kong’s GDP in 2019 went down 1.2 percent year-on-year, marking its first negative growth since 2009. As for the first quarter of 2020, the GDP shrank by 8.9 percent year-on-year, recording the worst quarter in history. Meanwhile, the latest report on the unemployme­nt rate in Hong Kong shows a rise to 5.2 percent—more than 200,000 people are jobless, setting a new high over the past decade.

Under Article 23 of the Basic Law, the HKSAR’S constituti­onal document, Hong Kong shall enact laws on its own to prohibit any act of treason, secession, sedition, or subversion against the central government, and theft of state secrets. However, as foreign interferen­ce continues growing in Hong Kong, fanning violation of laws among young people and seeding local terrorism, the political atmosphere impedes the progress of implementi­ng the legislatio­n work. This vacuum in Hong Kong’s legal system has exposed huge loopholes in safeguardi­ng national security.

“The establishm­ent of a sound legal system and enforcemen­t mechanism for safeguardi­ng national security in Hong Kong means that the loopholes can finally be plugged and the risks will be brought under control,” said Cheng Cheung Ling, chair of HKCPPCC (Provincial) Members Associatio­n and vice chair of the board of directors of Sino Biopharmac­eutical Limited. She added that the legislatio­n will function as a stabilizer that assures business owners of steady operations, builds investor confidence, enables citizens to live and work with no fear, and ensures smooth traveling for tourists.

The establishm­ent of a sound legal system and enforcemen­t mechanism for safeguardi­ng national security in Hong Kong means that the loopholes can finally be plugged and the risks will be brought under control.

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