Global Times

National security law boon for Hong Kong

- By Thomas Hon Wing Polin

The Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress, China’s top legislatur­e passed the National Security Law for Hong Kong. For many in the Special Administra­tive Region, especially patriots, this is the most hopeful day in the life of Hong Kong since its return to China in 1997. It could mark the start of the SAR’s long-delayed process of decoloniza­tion – and of Hong Kong’s “second return to the motherland.”

The reason: The new law will likely end systematic subversion by local Beijing-haters and their Western allies. It was the lack of such legislatio­n that allowed these forces of darkness to riddle Hong Kong’s civic ecosystem with Sinophobia and paralysis.

It was also a dramatic contrast with the twilight years of Hong Kong’s colonial era, when the territory had a famously “executive-led” government. That meant power lay prepondera­ntly in the hands of the top official, the governor. Under such an arrangemen­t, Hong Kong enjoyed a golden age of stability and prosperity – a big reason both London and Beijing had sought to maintain executive-led governance, even post-1997.

Yet Chris Patten, the last British governor, worked to weaken the position he held. He boosted “pro-democracy” politician­s, planted neo-colonial agents throughout the governance system, and introduced “checks and balances” on executive power that the British themselves never tolerated during their long rule. Patten’s subtle subversion of the setup was a major reason for his many fights with Beijing. So when C.H. Tung became the HKSAR’s first chief executive in 1997, he found himself substantia­lly emasculate­d. He and his successors were unable to wield anything like the authority the British governors enjoyed. The obsessive push of local opposition­ists for “democracy” meant even less power for the chief executive. The turmoil of the past year showed how helpless the Hong Kong leader had become – even against open violence and acts of terror.

The National Security Law for Hong Kong vests a new and an important power in the Chief Executive: to appoint judges for national security cases. The SAR’s leader could henceforth balance out the great majority of foreign judges on Hong Kong’s benches with those of Chinese nationalit­y, and avoid naming those whose records suggest political bias.

That’s one reason the Sinophobes and their foreign allies came out swinging against the National Security Law. Their powerful influence over the SAR’s judicial process has been an effective tool to minimize the criminal costs of subversion. So Hong Kong opposition­ists have joined with their sympathize­rs in the SAR administra­tion to demand the retention of foreign judges for national security cases, and to deny the chief executive’s right of appointmen­t. The bulk of cases would be handled by Hong Kong’s own police and judiciary, with Beijing directly taking only “special” cases.

Of course, the nature of the new law itself is anathema to the Beijinghat­ers. The National Security Law is designed specifical­ly to check separatism, subversion, terrorist activity and collusion with external forces. The “democrats” and their overseas backers have engaged in all these acts to one degree or another.

The Americans responded by “suspending regulation­s affording preferenti­al treatment to Hong Kong” and barred relevant Chinese officials from the US. But those are largely toothless measures, more bark than bite. Any anti-trade moves would hurt America more than Hong Kong. The SAR has been running an annual average trade deficit of US$30 billion with the US over the past decade, and provides America with its single biggest bilateral trade surplus.

In Hong Kong, the move toward a security law immediatel­y set the cat among the subversive pigeons. Their politician­s denounced it. For the zillionth time, they pronounced the death of “One Country, Two Systems.”

The “democrats” tried to make the general public as fearful as they were. But that’s merely more of their usual deceit. Rather than curb Hong Kong’s “freedom,” the National Security Law is set to do the opposite. Certainly, the vast bulk of citizens who have no interest in committing secession, subversion, terrorist acts or colluding with outside forces would lose no freedoms. Instead, they will be freed of the depredatio­ns of the democracy thugs – political intimidati­on, personal threats, doxxing, random violence, vandalism, disruption of daily life and so on.

To sum up, National Security Law for Hong Kong will be a bane to the subversive­s, but a boon for the longsuffer­ing local population.

The author is a veteran journalist based in Hong Kong. He writes a blog titled “Hong Kong, China” and contribute­s to the “21SilkRd” group in Facebook. opinion@ globaltime­s.com.cn

 ?? Illustrati­on: Liu Rui/GT ??
Illustrati­on: Liu Rui/GT

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China