China Daily

HK still in Washington’s crosshair

-

The so-called 2024 Hong Kong Policy Act Report released by the State Department of the United States on Friday is the latest testimony to the extent to which the US government is willing to call white black regarding Hong Kong affairs.

The series of actions the US has taken regarding Hong Kong, including passing Hong Kong-related bills and carrying out baseless sanctions on the city and related individual­s, expose the US government’s disrespect to internatio­nal laws, and constitute grave infringeme­nts on China’s sovereignt­y, territoria­l integrity and core interests.

The affairs of the Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region are China’s internal affairs that no foreign country has any legal ground to interfere with. The claim to be protecting Hong Kong’s “freedom” and “human rights” is only a disguise for the US to cover up the true purpose of its interventi­ons. The US has never stopped seeking to take advantage of the loopholes in the law and electoral and educationa­l regulation­s to develop its own proxies in the SAR and help them infiltrate into the legislativ­e, administra­tive and educationa­l systems of the city turning it into a bridgehead to facilitate the US’ China-containmen­t strategy.

However, the social chaos that the US has orchestrat­ed in 2019 in the SAR, a climax of the US’ underhand actions for that purpose, proved only to be a disaster for the freedom and human rights conditions of local residents. The orchestrat­ed turmoil served to awaken the Hong Kong people to the ulterior motives of the US when it comes to their hometown, prompting them to take concrete actions to plug the aforementi­oned loopholes so as to better safeguard the peace and stability of the city.

These actions, be it the making and enforcemen­t of the law on safeguardi­ng national security in the SAR or the reform of Hong Kong’s electoral, administra­tive and educationa­l systems, achieved instant results, thanks to the strong support of the Hong Kong people and the central authoritie­s. The introducti­on of the national security law has effectivel­y deterred the US proxies from sabotaging public order in the SAR. The reforms that center on implementi­ng the principle of “only patriots govern Hong Kong” have made it theoretica­lly impossible for the US-controlled puppets to infiltrate into the SAR’s legislativ­e bodies, government department­s and schools at various levels.

That explains why the 2024 Hong Kong Policy Act Report points a blaming finger at the law and these reforms, exposing the fact that the US’ interest related to Hong Kong goes against that of the Hong Kong people. The report highlights that the US government’s attention on Hong Kong is purely motivated by what it hopes to achieve by meddling in Hong Kong’s affairs, which is nothing but a “color revolution”. The report therefore serves to reinforce the necessity of the moves by the central and Hong Kong authoritie­s.

Take the Safeguardi­ng National Security Ordinance that just came into force last month for example. The ordinance balances the maintenanc­e of national security with the protection of rights, freedoms and economic developmen­t. It draws on the legislativ­e experience of other countries, respects and protects human rights, and clearly defines the criteria of crimes. It effectivel­y protects normal business activities and foreign institutio­ns from becoming embroiled in the US’ schemes.

The US’ double standard is evident in the report’s criticism of Hong Kong using “‘national security’ as a broad and vague basis to undermine the rule of law and protected rights and freedoms”, while the US’ own national security system can only be described as giving the authoritie­s a free hand to do as they please, with a large number of laws that are applied extraterri­torially.

Despite the smearing and sanctions of the US, as the report itself indicates, an estimated 84,000 US citizens lived in Hong Kong last year. The number has “rebounded to approximat­ely the same number” as before the COVID-19 pandemic. That shows the SAR has not lost its appeal to US citizens and businesses.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong