Shanghai Daily

Hong Kong situation still ‘grim and complex’ ‘I can smell terrorism’ NYT urged to stop false and absurd reports

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THE situation in Hong Kong is taking a positive turn, but it remains “grim and complex,” Yang Guang, a spokespers­on for the Hong Kong and Macao Affairs Office of the State Council said yesterday.

The small number of radical rioters have doubled down on their violent activities and committed outrageous crimes in a frenzy of insane rampage in some places, which have gone far beyond the category of normal demonstrat­ions, Yang said at a press conference.

Ending violence and chaos and restoring order, which is the top priority of Hong Kong, has become the broadest consensus and the strongest call of people from all walks of life in Hong Kong, said Yang.

China has reached the crucial juncture of safeguardi­ng the bottom line of “one Country, two Systems” principle and maintainin­g Hong Kong’s prosperity and stability, he said.

The spokesman noted that a small group of rioters in Hong Kong intend to confront the central government, and jeopardize the “one country, two systems” principle.

Deep-rooted problems

“They aim to put Hong Kong into chaos, paralyze the Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region government and then seize the administra­tion power, thus turning Hong Kong into an independen­t or semi-independen­t political entity,” he said.

Noting the unrest in Hong Kong reflects some deeprooted problems, which demand great attention and require effective measures to tackle, Yang added that the central government supports Carrie Lam and the HKSAR government to continue discussing solutions with people from all walks of life, including young people, through dialogue.

Yang urged people to distinguis­h between peaceful protests to express their demands and violent crimes and acts to challenge the bottom line of the “one country, two Systems” principle.

He also called on the society to focus on the fundamenta­l issues of the city’s economic growth and people’s livelihood.

When asked questions related to student strikes, the spokesman stressed that the radical protesters want to use students as a tool to put pressure on the HKSAR and the central government­s.

(CGTN) “THE acts of violence by a few rioters have gone beyond the scope of a peaceful assembly. Their acts of violence constitute violent crimes in any countries and regions under any law system. The radical protesters are definitely rioters,” spokesman Yang Guang said yesterday.

“They act as pawns of external forces and anti-China rabble-rousers so willingly, even at the cost of executing evil acts of violence and crimes. They are intent on gumming up Hong Kong and paralyzing its government, trying to exercise jurisdicti­on over the SAR, then turning Hong Kong into an independen­t or semi-independen­t political entity.

They have used lethal weapons, and 1,600 police officers have had their personal informatio­n leaked online, he said.

Nearly 100 petrol bombs have been used, and MTR control rooms have been damaged, he continues. “I can smell terrorism,” he said.

On the issue of universal suffrage, Yang said that the Hong Kong democratic system was developed after 1997, and the Basic Law states the chief executive and legislatur­e can be elected by universal suffrage.

Since the handover, Beijing has been making progress on democracy in the city, Yang says. In 2007, China’s top legislativ­e body even decided that the city’s leader and legislatur­e would be elected through universal suffrage by 2017 at the earliest. On August 31, 2014, Beijing issued the “831” political reform framework. It was only because of the opposition camp that an electoral reform package tabled in accordance with that framework was voted down, he says.

(Agencies) THE Office of the Commission­er of the Chinese Foreign Ministry in the Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region yesterday urged the New York Times to stop backing anti-China troublemak­ers calling for so-called “Hong Kong independen­ce.”

The New York Times has published false reports and absurd remarks on the Hong Kong situation in recent months, whitewashi­ng Jimmy Lai, a leading antiChina activist who attempts to mess up Hong Kong, endorsing Joshua Wong and Alex Chow, radical activists calling for so-called “Hong Kong independen­ce,” and venomously attacking the Central Government, the SAR Government and the Hong Kong police, said the spokespers­on of the commission­er’s office.

The spokespers­on said that NYT has turned a deaf ear to the calls of the Chinese people, including 7.5 million Hong Kong citizens, for stopping violence, ending the chaos and restoring order.

“It has presented a platform for anti-China forces and radical activists calling for ‘Hong Kong independen­ce’ to spread rumor and smear the Central and SAR government­s, and spared no effort to package them as representa­tives of the majority,” the spokespers­on said.

They act as pawns of external forces and antiChina rabblerous­ers.

(Xinhua)

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