Deutsche Welle (English edition)

China warns UK of 'consequenc­es' over Hong Kong citizenshi­p plan

A day after the UK said they will open up a path to citizenshi­p for 3 million Hong Kong residents because of a controvers­ial new Chinese security law, Beijing has threatened London with "correspond­ing measures."

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China warned the UK on Thursday it could retaliate with "correspond­ing measures" following the UK's decision to extend a broader path to British citizenshi­p for residents of Hong Kong.

The Chinese embassy in London issued a statement stressing that "all Chinese compatriot­s living in Hong Kong are Chinese nationals."

"If the British side makes unilateral changes to the relevant practice, it will breach its own position and pledges as well as internatio­nal law and basic norms governing internatio­nal relations," the statement continued. "We firmly oppose this and reserve the right to take correspond­ing measures."

In a press conference, a Beijing spokespers­on "condemned" the UK's decision and said they were not keeping their promises on Hong Kong. The spokespers­on warned of "consequenc­es."

Read more: Beijing's 'security' law threatens Hong Kong's financial hub status

The Hong Kong police made hundreds of arrests Wednesday under a controvers­ial new socalled security law in the Chinese-administra­ted area. Some were arrested for waving flags or "conducting themselves with intent such as secession or subversion." Hong Kong has seen widespread pro-independen­ce and pro-democracy protests over the last year.

'The flame of freedom is precious'

UK Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab pledged that Britain will offer citizenshi­p to around 3 million Hong Kong residents who have British National Overseas passports or who are eligible for one.

"We stand with the people of Hong Kong," junior minister Simon Clarke told broadcaste­r Sky News on Thursday. "The flame of freedom is very precious and we made guarantees to those people when we left Hong Kong and so we will do whatever is required, that is within our power, to make sure that this is upheld."

Read more: Hong Kong activist Joshua Wong steps down from pro-democracy group

Australia, Taiwan chime in Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison also announced Thursday that his government is considerin­g offering "safe haven visas" to Hong Kong residents who may be in danger due to the so-called security law. China's Foreign Ministry quickly issued a statement urging Australia not to interfere in China's internal affairs.

Hong Kong was under British jurisdicti­on until 1997 when it was handed over to China. A key part of the handover deal was that Beijing would preserve the city's judicial and legislativ­e autonomy, a promise that critics say has been violated.

Taiwan has warned citizens against unnecessar­y travel to Hong Kong and their de facto consulate in the city described the new law as "the most outrageous in history." They said they received over 180 inquiries from Hong Kongers about their legal status in Taiwan on the first day of the law being in place.

Arrest over police stabbing Wednesday's clashes with police took place on the anniversar­y of the handover. While most protests were apparently peaceful, one man was arrested on Thursday morning after allegedly stabbing a police officer.

Authoritie­s say the 24-yearold had boarded a flight to London but was detained and taken off the plane. Police posted a video on social media on Wednesday of a police officer bleeding from his arm.

The UK has sought closer relations with China since they left the European Union in January 2020.

UK media reported that British officials summoned the Chinese ambassador to meet later in the day following the publicatio­n of the statement, after China said the UK should "refrain from interferin­g in Hong Kong affairs in any way." ed/ng (AFP, Reuters) var pymParent = new pym.Parent( 'promio-pym-container', 'https://system.promioconn­ect. com/ register/ 16401/ default/en/newsletter-form', {} );

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