Global Times

Strong will to defend sovereignt­y

NPC approves national security legislatio­n; blow to US proxies in HK

- By Chen Qingqing, Yang Sheng and Bai Yunyi

China has taken the first crucial step regarding the national security legislatio­n for Hong Kong as the country’s top legislatur­e passed the decision on Thursday, and experts noted that the next step will be finalizing the legislatio­n in detail and make the law executable in the city within its common law legal system. The legislatio­n will directly strike against the UScontroll­ed proxies and political groups in Hong Kong, who had previously incited trouble in the city with little concern about the consequenc­es.

The National People’s Congress (NPC) voted on Thursday to pass 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 at the closing of the third session of the 13th NPC. On Wednesday night (Beijing time), US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo reported to the US Congress that “Hong Kong was no longer autonomous from China,” threatenin­g to revoke US’ favorable trade status for Hong Kong.

The passage of the decision reflected the strong will and determinat­ion of the central government and Chinese people in safeguardi­ng sovereignt­y, which will never be deterred by mounting pressure from the outside, some observers said.

The passage of the decision would be followed by an accelerati­on of formulatin­g the law, which is expected to take effect in Hong Kong through the Annex III of the Basic Law. While the state-level national security department­s are expected to establish special agencies in the SAR, both central-level and local-level law enforcemen­t mechanisms are expected to be enhanced in tackling

acts and activities endangerin­g national security, observers said.

The decision was passed by a majority of vote, reflecting that the central government and Chinese people have strong will and determinat­ion in protecting sovereignt­y, and no matter how many measures and steps the US government takes, they would not alter Chinese government’s stance and decision, Lau Siu-kai, a vice-president of the Chinese Associatio­n of Hong Kong and Macao Studies, told the Global Times on Thursday.

“Though there could be some price to pay, Beijing would be determined in handling long-term problems existing in the SAR,” the veteran observer said.

National security ‘top priority’

Tian Feilong, a Hong Kong affairs expert and associate professor at Beihang University in Beijing, told the Global Times that the passage of the decision on Thursday is the first step, and the next step is to push the legislatio­n in details to make the national security law executable under the common law legal system of Hong Kong (different from the mainland’s civil law system), and during the process, all constructi­ve suggestion­s from scholars, law-enforcemen­t officials, legal profession­als and different groups of Hong Kong society are welcome.

“However, it would be certain that the national security law will not be constraine­d by Hong Kong’s common law system. When the law and Hong Kong’s legal system see some contradict­ions in some specific cases in the future, the common law system should make adjustment­s,” he noted.

Leading anti-China and separatist activists in Hong Kong, such as Jimmy Lai Chee-ying, Martin Lee Chuming and Joshua Wong Chi-fung, who are mainly responsibl­e for the riots and turmoil starting from June 2019 until now, are highly unlikely to escape from legal punishment, because the one purpose of the legislatio­n is to punish those people who collude with the US and other foreign forces to undermine Hong Kong’s stability and public order, mainland Chinese experts said.

“If they continue their illegal activities after the law comes into effect, they will surely be punished; even if they stop their illegal behavior, they would still be punished because the harm they brought to the city and the nation would still exist in the long term, therefore this could be a viable avenue for prosecutio­n, even if the law does not have any retroactiv­e effects to back-tracking the behavior before the legislatio­n was enacted,” Tian said.

The decision carries seven parts including stressing to take necessary measures to establish and improve the legal system and enforcemen­t mechanisms for safeguardi­ng national security in the Hong Kong SAR, preventing, stopping and punishing those acts and activities that endanger national security. Compared to the draft decision unveiled for the first time on May 22 by Wang Chen, vice chairman of the Standing Committee of the NPC, the decision approved on Thursday added “activities” in addition to acts endangerin­g national security, which is believed to specifical­ly define the scope of acts and activities targeted by the law.

“The amendments by the NPC Standing Committee would require special law enforcemen­t agencies to implement institutio­ns in Hong Kong for investigat­ion and prosecutio­n, with more detailed laws on how to define those acts endangerin­g national security and their legal consequenc­es,” Tian said.

It also clarified that China firmly opposes any foreign interferen­ce in

Hong Kong’s internal affairs by any means, and will resolutely take countermea­sures if necessary.

China has announced to sanction a number of non-government associatio­ns last December including the National Endowment for Democracy (NED), the National Democratic Institute for Internatio­nal Affairs (NDI), the Internatio­nal Republican Institute (IRI), Freedom House and HRW, as evidence shows these NGOs have supported anti-China forces that have created chaos in the city, and encouraged those forces to engage in extreme violent criminal acts and hyped up separatist activities in Hong Kong.

Law enforcemen­t enhanced

While some observers anticipate­d that the process of formulatin­g and enacting the law would be fully sped up as it’s an urgent task to remedy loopholes in Hong Kong’s legal system, some suggested that the law could be put into effect in the coming weeks, given domestic terrorism in Hong Kong is on the rise while the secessioni­sts and their subversive activities have been fueled by the support of foreign forces.

“This is a new beginning for the practice of the ‘one country, two systems.’ We have accumulate­d experience and lessons in the past 23 years in applying this national policy in the SAR and now we face new challenges, the passage signals our new starting point,” Li Xiaobing, an expert on Hong Kong, Macao and Taiwan at Nankai University in Tianjin, told the Global Times on Thursday.

“We should establish a special court for dealing with cases relevant to national security. Legal systems and enforcemen­t mechanisms constructe­d at the national level must be able to assume such a basic responsibi­lity,” Li said, noting that state and local-level agencies could coordinate while remaining independen­t in both serving national security interests.

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