Global Times

US sanctions won’t impact HK: Lam

- By Yang Sheng and Chen Qingqing

Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region (HKSAR) Chief Executive Carrie Lam said she is committed to fully supporting and pushing forward the formulatio­n of the national security law, and she condemned the US and the UK for their double standards on the issue at a press briefing after she had met with senior central government officials in Beijing on Wednesday.

The UK is closely following the US with further actions to meddle in China’s national security legislatio­n for HKSAR, and the UK foreign secretary even called on China to “step back from the brink” by threatenin­g to form an internatio­nal alliance to pressure China on Hong Kong affairs.

The Chinese Foreign Ministry responded, “We also advise the British side to step back from the brink.”

Lam arrived in Beijing together with Secretary of Justice Teresa Cheng,

Commission­er of the Hong Kong Police Force Chris Tang and Secretary for Security John Lee on Tuesday, and met with Chinese Vice Premier Han Zheng and other senior officials of the central government, including State Councilor and Minister of Public Security Zhao Kezhi, and Director of the Hong Kong and Macao Affairs Office of the State Council Xia Baolong on Wednesday.

Han is now the head of the Central Leading Group on Hong Kong and Macao Affairs, and Zhao is the deputy head of the group. The Xinhua News Agency reported this is the first formal appearance of the group.

After the meeting, Lam held a press conference at the Office of the HKSAR Government in Beijing with other Hong Kong officials, and said that “the meeting lasted three hours,” during which Vice Premier Han pointed out the law won’t affect the legitimate rights of the majority of Hong Kong people, as it targets only a very few people, behavior and activities endangerin­g national security.

From May 21 to 22, Lam went to Beijing for the “two sessions.” Within two weeks, Lam returned to Beijing with major officials from the Hong Kong Disciplina­ry Services.

She claimed that the HKSAR government and the central government won’t be intimidate­d by growing external pressure.

“I hope other countries would respect China’s firm stance on the matter, and won’t take unilateral measures that would lead to a negative influence,” Lam said in response to pressures from countries like the US and the UK over the national security legislatio­n for Hong Kong.

Despite external pressures, the pace of formulatin­g and enacting the national security law would further accelerate given the active attitude of the HKSAR government, Li Xiaobing, an expert on Hong Kong affairs at Nankai University in Tianjin, told the Global Times on Wednesday.

“The meeting with senior central government officials also served as an opportunit­y to report public sentiment from Hong Kong, including those from the legal profession and other sectors, on this law to the top authority,” Li said, noting that as the law would be introduced to Hong Kong through Annex III of the Basic Law, it also requires a full-fledged and dynamic coordinati­on between central and local authoritie­s.

China’s sovereignt­y issue is now being undermined in Hong Kong as forces advocating separatism and even terrorism are on the rise in HKSAR. The central government has no other alternativ­e but to take stringent action to safeguard the “one country” of the “one country, two systems” policy, Lam said.

Some foreign government­s have been adopting latent double standards when dealing with and commenting on the national security legislatio­n, Lam said.

“It is within the legitimate jurisdicti­on of any country to enact the law. The US is no exception, and the UK is no exception,” Lam said, asking why they oppose the legislatio­n and even threatened to impose sanctions on the HKSAR and the People’s Republic of China for taking similar action.

“The special status of Hong Kong comes from the Basic Law, including the independen­t tariff zone, free port and global financial center. And the US sanctions, such as revoking its special treatment of Hong Kong, which gives the city favorable trade, won’t have any impact on the HKSAR,” Lam said at the press briefing.

UK gets drunk

Apart from the US, the UK is now making a new move to further interfere in China’s national security legislatio­n for Hong Kong. In a joint letter to Prime Minister Boris Johnson, a cross-party group of seven former foreign secretarie­s says that the UK government “must be seen to lead the internatio­nal response” as China pushes for the national security legislatio­n, BBC reported on Monday.

The former cabinet members expressed their concern at what they call China’s “flagrant breach” of Sino-British agreements, according to BBC. They urged Johnson to set up an “internatio­nal contact group” of allies to coordinate any joint action, similar to that set up in 1994 to try to end the conflicts in the former Yugoslavia.

Li Haidong, a professor at the Institute of Internatio­nal Relations of the

China Foreign Affairs University,

told the Global Times on Wednesday that these UK politician­s are making a serious mistake, as it seems like they are still living in their old dream of a Great British Empire.

“China is much more powerful and united than the former Yugoslavia, and the West today is far weaker and less influentia­l than it was in the 1990s, so if they use the approach for the Balkans in the 1990s to interfere in China’s internal affairs, they will definitely receive disastrous and unbearable retaliatio­n,” Li said.

Many Chinese web users also mocked the move by UK politician­s. “After Brexit, London is getting more and more drunk. It seems like they are addicted to the illusion of the ‘empire on which the sun never sets’,” read one comment that received hundreds of likes on guancha. cn, a Chinese news website.

Step back from the brink

A spokespers­on from the Chinese Embassy to Britain said on Tuesday that China expresses grave concern about and strong opposition to such flagrant interferen­ce in Hong Kong affairs, which are China’s internal affairs.

“We urge the relevant UK politician­s to accept the fact that Hong Kong is now part of China, to observe the principle of noninterfe­rence in other country’s internal affairs, and to stop meddling in Hong Kong affairs, which are China’s internal affairs, in any form,” said the spokespers­on.

UK Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab said, “The UK would not turn a blind eye.” He also said the new security legislatio­n “very clearly violates” the autonomy that is guaranteed under Chinese law as well as that in the 1997 agreement, BBC reported on Monday.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokespers­on Zhao Lijian said on Wednesday, “China expresses strong dissatisfa­ction with this and firmly opposes it. We have made solemn representa­tions to the British side.”

The Sino-British Joint Declaratio­n does not contain any words or clauses that entrust the UK with any responsibi­lity for Hong Kong after its return to China in 1997, and the UK has “no sovereignt­y, governance or supervisio­n over the returned Hong Kong,” Zhao said.

Therefore, the British side has no right to use the “Sino-British Joint Statement” to make irresponsi­ble remarks on Hong Kong affairs and interfere in China’s internal affairs, he remarked.

Raab confirmed that the UK will allow those who hold British National (Overseas) (BNO) passports to come to the UK and apply to study and work for an extendable 12-month period.

On this matter, the Chinese Embassy spokespers­on said the UK had explicitly pledged in an MOU exchanged with China that BNO passport holders who are Chinese citizens residing in Hong Kong will not have the right of abode in the UK.

“If the UK is bent on changing this unilateral­ly, it will not only go against its own position and promise, but also violate internatio­nal law and the basic norms governing internatio­nal relations,” the Chinese Embassy spokespers­on said.

 ?? Photo: AFP ?? Hong Kong’s Chief Executive Carrie Lam speaks during a briefing at the Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region office during her visit in Beijing on Wednesday. She said she is committed to fully supporting and pushing forward the formulatio­n of the national security law and she condemned the US and the UK for their double standards on the issue.
Photo: AFP Hong Kong’s Chief Executive Carrie Lam speaks during a briefing at the Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region office during her visit in Beijing on Wednesday. She said she is committed to fully supporting and pushing forward the formulatio­n of the national security law and she condemned the US and the UK for their double standards on the issue.
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