China Daily

Joint checkpoint envisioned to connect HK to mainland

- By SHADOW LI in Hong Kong Cao Yin contribute­d to this story.

China’s top legislatur­e began deliberati­ons on Friday on a joint checkpoint arrangemen­t for the express rail link connecting the Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region with Guangzhou, Guangdong province.

The co-location plan addresses new issues that have come up in the implementa­tion of the “one country, two systems” policy, and endorsemen­t by the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress would give the plan binding force, Zhang Xiaoming, director of the Hong Kong and Macao Affairs Office of the State Council, said during an explanatio­n to the legislator­s on Friday.

The resolution is scheduled for a vote on Wednesday. It is the second step in a three-step process for the Guangzhou-Shenzhen-Hong Kong Express Rail Link (XRL), a much-anticipate­d piece of infrastruc­ture that will merge the Hong Kong SAR into the Chinese mainland’s highspeed rail networks.

An agreement to launch a joint checkpoint service at West Kowloon Station on the Hong Kong section of the XRL was signed on Nov 18, between the mainland and the Hong Kong SAR, signaling the start of the process.

If the national legislatur­e approves the plan, the region could implement it through local legislatio­n — the last step in the process.

The co-location arrangemen­t, which is key to the XRL, will save time and add convenienc­e for passengers crossing the boundary. It will enable one-stop clearance and boundary control by allowing customs from both sides to perform their duties in accordance with their respective laws at their designated areas inside the West Kowloon Station.

Introducin­g the plan during a panel discussion on Friday afternoon, Shen Yueyue, vice-chair of the NPC Standing Committee, said that the co-location arrangemen­t offers mutual benefits for Hong Kong and the mainland, and will surely bring new economic opportunit­y to the SAR and play an important role in its stability and prosperity.

Ambrose Lee Siu-kwong, a Hong Kong deputy to the NPC and former security secretary, lauded the better connection with the mainland offered by the proposal.

The 26-kilometer-long XRL, which expected to be opened in the third quarter of next year, will shorten the commute between Hong Kong and Guangzhou from two hours to less than 50 minutes, enabling more efficient exchanges within the 11-city cluster of the Greater Bay Area.

Lee, who witnessed a juxtaposit­ion plan being implemente­d at the Shenzhen Bay control point 10 years ago, said there were concerns and questions over the arrangemen­t then, but a decade later it is clear that the co-location arrangemen­t has deepened exchanges between Hong Kong and the mainland.

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