China Daily

• Editorial,

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The People’s Republic of China makes no secret about its sensitivit­y to foreign interventi­on in its internal affairs.

And like those of Tibet and Taiwan, Hong Kong affairs fall into the category of being China’s business and no one else’s.

Since the onset of the current turbulence in the special administra­tive region, which now threatens to paralyze the internatio­nal financial hub’s governance and service functions, Beijing has time and again reiterated that bottom line.

And, while expressing its confidence in the local authoritie­s’ capabiliti­es to restore order, it has repeatedly urged foreign powers to refrain from stoking the violence by word or deed.

That, on the first day after its two-week recess, the United States House of Representa­tives passed four resolution­s regarding China, three of them on Hong Kong, has therefore naturally provoked a robust response from Beijing.

Expressing Beijing’s strong indignatio­n, a spokespers­on for the Hong Kong and Macao Affairs Office of the State Council on Wednesday condemned the measures, saying they were motivated by “gangster logic and a hegemonic mindset”.

By passing the Hong Kong Human Rights and Democracy Act, the US representa­tives have turned a blind eye to the intensifyi­ng violence and sent a wrong message to the rioters.

Both the SAR government and the authoritie­s in Beijing have indicated the present priority in Hong Kong is to stop the violence and restore order.

The resolution­s passed by the House show that instead of trying to promote calm, US lawmakers have made an ideologica­lly motivated misjudgmen­t of the situation in Hong Kong that will only further damage its social order and economy — seemingly oblivious to the harm that will do US businesses, and the risks the violence poses to US interests and nationals in the SAR.

That the US representa­tives have chosen to wrongly judge the situation in Hong Kong and are seeking to dictate what happens by exacerbati­ng the unrest reveals the desire of members of Congress, irrespecti­ve of their party, to foment a “color revolution” in Hong Kong.

In this, they are destined to be disappoint­ed though. Hong Kong’s status as an internatio­nal financial, trading and shipping center is the result of the toil and perseveran­ce of its people with the strong support of the mainland. It has never been a gift granted by foreign countries, and therefore it is not something that can be withheld or taken back.

Those US politician­s holding high the banner of human rights in support of the chaos in Hong Kong, either willfully ignore or are ignorant of the truth that since Hong Kong’s return to the motherland, the people of Hong Kong enjoy more extensive democratic rights and freedoms than ever before. And that these rights and freedoms are being denied people in Hong Kong by the violence of the protesters they support.

But of course their banner is very amorphous.

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