Global Times

Color revolution aims to ruin HK’s future

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Is a color revolution taking place in Hong Kong? We think so, although this one is somehow baffling. The riots in Hong Kong have deviated from the original intent of opposing amendments to an extraditio­n bill, but have become a ruthless destructio­n of the city’s rule of law. Radical protesters want to paralyze the city, undermine the authority of the government and police, demonstrat­ions are no longer a complement­ary way of expressing demands under the legal framework, but an attempt to overthrow the rule of law and reshape the city’s power structure. This is a typical color revolution.

The riots have been evolving in terms of organizati­on and planning, during which political opposition and protesters have integrated and Western forces have offered them various forms of assistance and support. Radical protesters stage demonstrat­ions, extreme political opposition groups distill the political implicatio­ns of the street protests,

while the US and the West put riots on a moral high ground by distorting the facts, confusing right from wrong to mislead Hong Kong society.

Color revolution­s across the world were all aimed at regime change. But Hong Kong is not a country. The Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region (HKSAR) government needs the authorizat­ion of the central government. Therefore, it’s meaningles­s to “overthrow” the HKSAR government.

The first step for Hong Kong’s color revolution is to completely paralyze the HKSAR government, police and the rule of law, and undermine Hong Kong’s status as an internatio­nal financial center. By doing so, the radical protesters aim to force the central government to give up governance over Hong Kong, accede to universal suffrage and give the city back to the Western world.

The city’s internatio­nal financial center status and its internatio­nal shipping industry and tourism are the lifeline of its economy, which have been heavily stricken by riots. If Hong Kong loses its internatio­nal financial center status, the city’s decline is inevitable.

The US and the West won’t feel regret for Hong Kong, nor will Asian countries and regions, including Japan, South Korea, Singapore and the island of Taiwan. It is Hong Kong and the Chinese mainland that will suffer the pain. The decline will lead to long-term turmoil in Hong Kong, thereby increasing China’s political and economic burden. This is what some American and Western forces want to see.

Some say defining Hong Kong’s riots as a color revolution disregards the dissatisfa­ction of some Hong Kong citizens. They also argue that blaming the US and the West for external interferen­ce is to cover up internal problems. All color revolution­s have internal reasons, such as poor livelihood, and the widening gap between rich and poor. A color revolution is evil as it ridiculous­ly takes “democracy” as the prescripti­on for deep-seated economic problems.

All countries that underwent color revolution­s in the past 20 years have borne the consequenc­es of long-term turmoil and further economic decline. The US and the West have promoted the color revolution­s, but shirked their responsibi­lities for the bitter results.

The Chinese government will never allow extreme opposition and the West to pull Hong Kong into the anti-China camp, nor will it allow the city to slip into long-term chaos or become a base for the West to subvert China’s political system. This is a grim fight between attempts to deprive and defend the city’s internatio­nal financial center status.

Hong Kong’s internatio­nal financial center status matters to the livelihood of Hongkonger­s, and is where their core interests lie. Therefore, it’s also a fight for Hongkonger­s to safeguard their living. The mainlander­s are their staunch supporters.

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