Shanghai Daily

UK meddling in China affairs shows colonial mentality

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THE sun has set on the British empire, but it seems that some in London have yet to wake up from their colonial dreams.

From January 31, Hong Kong residents who hold the so-called British National Overseas (BNO) passports could apply for settlement and British citizenshi­p.

Such a political manipulati­on driven by a colonial thinking is a flagrant interferen­ce in China’s internal affairs, which will take another toll on bilateral ties and further hurt Britain’s own long-term interests.

As an immediate countermea­sure, China said it will no longer recognize the BNO passport as a valid travel document or for identifica­tion from January 31 and reserves the right to take further actions.

Britain’s tailored policy for Hong Kong residents reflects that the outdated mentality of colonialis­m still doggedly persist in the minds of some decision-makers in London. They are still pretending that they have some kind of a special responsibi­lity for Hong Kong, which is handed back to China more than two decades ago.

The truth is that from the moment the handover of Hong Kong was done, all the rights and obligation­s regarding Britain in the Sino-British Joint Declaratio­n were fulfilled.

‘Historical duty’ claim

It means that Britain has no sovereignt­y, jurisdicti­on or right of “supervisio­n” over Hong Kong since then, and the “historical duty” it claimed it has to the Hong Kong people is as misleading as it is fictional.

Obviously, there are at least three calculatio­ns behind its new BNO policy: to cash in on those immigrants from Hong Kong, who could bring considerab­le economic benefits to Britain; to sow more seeds of chaos and divisions in Hong Kong; and to force Beijing to compromise on issues related to Hong Kong, particular­ly the National Security Law.

In the past two and half years, London has repeatedly tried to make waves in Hong Kong. The Chinese city, in its eyes, is no more than a geopolitic­al leverage.

The birth of the law to safeguard national security in Hong Kong is the constituti­onal obligation of the Chinese government and a fundamenta­l move to restore stability in one of the world’s most robust financial hubs. Beijing will not give in for doing the right thing.

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