Global Times

Pompeo plays innocent about HK affairs

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US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has taken another bite at China. On Sunday, the uninhibite­d official said he believed China had threatened to interfere with the work of US journalist­s in Hong Kong and warned Beijing that any decision impinging on Hong Kong’s autonomy could affect the US assessment of the city’s status.

Those foreign news outlets, including US ones, receive work visa from the Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region government. They are under the oversight of the Hong Kong. The central government does not intervene with media matters either.

But when the words and deeds of foreign reporters and their reporting touch relations between countries, it becomes a diplomatic issue. Under such circumstan­ces, China’s Foreign Ministry will step in – as only a clear stance from the central government can have an effective impact.

In March, China revoked the accreditat­ions of American correspond­ents with three major US news outlets as countermea­sures after the US slashed the number of journalist­s at four major Chinese state-owned media outlets in the US. These American journalist­s will not be allowed to continue working as journalist­s in China, including the Hong Kong and Macao Special Administra­tive Regions.

Chinese Foreign Ministry Spokespers­on Geng Shuang said, “In taking these countermea­sures against the US, the Central Government is exercising its diplomatic authority in accordance with the ‘one country, two systems’ principle and the Basic Law.”

Article 13 of the Basic Law stipulates that, “The Central People’s Government shall be responsibl­e for the foreign affairs relating to the Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region.” It also states that, “The Central People’s Government authorizes the Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region to conduct relevant external affairs on its own in accordance with this Law.”

As tensions between the US and China deepen and Hong Kong SAR is at the forefront of the bilateral conflicts, the central government is expected to make responses based on China’s diplomatic principles and internatio­nal current affairs. It sanctioned a number of foreign non-government organizati­ons last year, including the US National Endowment for Democracy, the US National Democratic Institute, and Human Rights Watch, which are believed to have played a spiteful role in Hong Kong’s monthslong violent protests.

Under the banner of democracy, these organizati­ons destabiliz­ed and ruined Hong Kong.

In Western media reports on Hong Kong’s protests, especially from the US, we can see that the Americans have their own set of ideologica­l logic that they advocate worldwide.

Under their rhetoric, China has no democracy and Hong Kong people take to the street because they do not have universal suffrage. But the Americans never reflect on their own democratic flaws.

The reports of Western media on Hong Kong did not reveal the complexity of the city’s problems. There was barely any mention of the interferen­ce of external forces and they made it sound as if universal suffrage is a once-and-for-all remedy. The ulterior motive of reporting like this is actually to instigate violence in Hong Kong and drive a wedge between Hong Kong and the mainland.

Meanwhile, journalist­ic objectivit­y counted for nothing in Western media’s coverage of Hong Kong. When extreme radicals in Hong Kong resorted to violence to meet their political ends, Western media just turned a blind eye. A CNN reporter has unreasonab­ly described demonstrat­ions as “peaceful” while protesters were throwing projectile­s at police. As Western media still hold powers of discourse with their twisted logic, many Hong Kong youth have been misguided.

Hong Kong affairs are China’s internal affairs. The central government is obliged to secure Hong Kong’s stability.

The statement of Pompeo this time is another accusation against China out of thin air. The pompous politician is further exposed that he would recklessly attack China for securing US’ geopolitic­al interests.

The article was compiled by Global Times reporter Wang Wenwen based on an interview with Li Xiaobing, an expert on Hong Kong, Macao and Taiwan studies at Nankai University in Tianjin. wangwenwen@globaltime­s.com.cn

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