China Daily

HK university stresses stance against separatism

- By HE SHUSI in Hong Kong heshusi@chinadaily­hk.com

A leading university in the Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region stressed its firm stance against Hong Kong independen­ce in response to reports that a group of its students are advocating independen­ce.

On Wednesday, the Chinese University of Hong Kong published an official statement that the Basic Law clearly states that Hong Kong is an inalienabl­e part of the People’s Republic of China and “any speech or act that incites or promotes Hong Kong independen­ce is in contravent­ion of the Basic Law”.

The statement came after a student organizati­on in the university openly recruited members via social media last Friday to initiate “academic discussion” of the feasibilit­y of Hong Kong independen­ce and to “safeguard students’ freedom of speech”.

The city’s leading university in social science said it will ensure that the campus is a place for the engagement of rational intellectu­al pursuits, instead of political contests, while continuing to do its utmost to protect freedom of speech and academic autonomy.

The university vowed to actively communicat­e with its students on all matters related to the activities of student organizati­ons.

CUHK made a similar announceme­nt in September when banners carrying slogans advocating Hong Kong independen­ce were spotted in various locations on campus at the beginning of the semester. The banners were removed by school authoritie­s.

On Thursday, the People’s Daily’s overseas edition also published an article condemning the students’ move, stressing that freedom of speech is not a “fig leaf” to cover up separatist notions.

Hong Kong definitely enjoys academic freedom and freedom of speech, the article said. “However, any form of freedom shall not be espoused at the expense of the law,” it argued.

The article Hong Kong Research Society condemned the Independen­ce for using freedom of speech as a defense for the advocacy of independen­ce. Their deeds violate the national Constituti­on and the Basic Law, Hong Kong’s constituti­onal document, and tread on the “one country, two systems” principle, the article argued.

“They were actually justifying their illegal acts,” the article said. Any attempts to challenge national sovereignt­y, security or developmen­tal interests are unacceptab­le and unlawful no matter how those people portray their deeds.

Universiti­es should be a place for academic creation rather than a stage for political advocates, it added. “The reputation and teaching standards of the university will be damaged at the end of the day.”

 ?? JIN ZHENQIANG / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? SWAT members in Wuhan, Hubei province, rappel down a training building on Wednesday. More than 400 SWAT members took part in the exercise signifying the beginning of this year’s training, which includes anti-terrorism and bomb disposal.
JIN ZHENQIANG / FOR CHINA DAILY SWAT members in Wuhan, Hubei province, rappel down a training building on Wednesday. More than 400 SWAT members took part in the exercise signifying the beginning of this year’s training, which includes anti-terrorism and bomb disposal.

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