China Daily

HK leaders vow electoral change cooperatio­n

- By GANG WEN in Hong Kong gangwen@chinadaily.com.cn Chen Shuman contribute­d to this story.

Leaders of the Hong Kong government and the special administra­tive region’s Legislativ­e Council said on Tuesday that they will join forces to fully cooperate with the implementa­tion of an improved electoral system in the SAR.

Their remarks came as the threeday public consultati­on in the city held by high-level department­s of the central authoritie­s entered its second day. Various seminars were held to collect views from representa­tives including heads of government bureaus, business leaders and educators.

Meeting the media before an Executive Council meeting on Tuesday, Chief Executive Carrie Lam Cheng Yuet-ngor said that after the National People’s Congress Standing Committee revises Annex I and Annex II of the Basic Law, the Hong Kong government will put forward the amendments of local laws to the legislatur­e and cooperate with it to speed up the process.

To improve efficiency, the government will propose the changes, involving over 20 local laws, in a comprehens­ive bill, Lam said. She added that the government has already arranged designated officials to take charge of the work to draft the bill. Regarding any possible questions raised by lawmakers, officials are required to reply in one or two days, she said.

But Lam also conceded that the schedule is quite tight for the central authoritie­s and the Hong Kong government to complete the amendments, arrange voter registrati­on and conduct elections. As a result, it would be “quite difficult” to hold this year’s legislativ­e election on Sept 5 as scheduled, she said.

Meanwhile, the chief executive expressed gratitude to the central authoritie­s for sending a group of high-level officials to Hong Kong and conducting large-scale consultati­ons to solicit opinions.

After attending one of the consultati­on meetings, Legislativ­e Council President Andrew Leung Kwanyuen told reporters that when the government submits the bill to amend local legislatio­n, he would be happy to hold additional meetings of the Legislativ­e Council to accelerate the process.

Prominent officials from the central authoritie­s are holding 66 seminars and meetings and consulting with over 1,000 representa­tives of a wide cross-section of Hong Kong society over a three-day period ending on Wednesday.

During a seminar on Tuesday, Zhang Xiaoming, deputy director of the State Council’s Hong Kong and Macao Affairs Office, said the events were in fact “pre-legislativ­e consultati­on”, a widely adopted process before legislatio­n.

Education sector representa­tive Lawrence Tang Fei, vice-chairman of the Hong Kong Federation of Education Workers, said after a seminar that the election should not aim to protect the vested interests of certain sectors.

He said that a key issue for the education sector in determinin­g the effectiven­ess of the election would be whether suitable persons capable of improving Hong Kong’s overall education quality and global competency can be elected.

Hong Kong lawmaker Jeffrey Lam Kin-fung, representi­ng the business sector, suggested including more representa­tives of young people, women’s organizati­ons and mainlandfu­nded institutio­ns in the legislatur­e.

He also advised the authoritie­s to look at whether candidates holding foreign passports should be banned from standing for election, a practice that has been adopted by some overseas regions.

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Chief Executive of the Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region Carrie Lam Cheng Yuet-ngor signs her name to a petition in Hong Kong on Monday in support of the National People’s Congress’ decision on improving the electoral system of the HKSAR.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Chief Executive of the Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region Carrie Lam Cheng Yuet-ngor signs her name to a petition in Hong Kong on Monday in support of the National People’s Congress’ decision on improving the electoral system of the HKSAR.

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