Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

China tells UK, others to stop ‘smearing’ new HK security law

- Agencies letters@hindustant­imes.com

China urged Britain to stop making “groundless accusation­s” about Hong Kong’s new national security law and denounced countries that “smear” legislatio­n that critics say further threatens freedoms in the former British colony.

Hong Kong lawmakers unanimousl­y passed the law on Tuesday, fast-tracking legislatio­n to fortify perceived threats and cracking down on dissent after sometimes violent pro-democracy protests swept the territory in 2019.

Hong Kong affairs are “purely China’s internal affairs” and the “British side is not qualified to make irresponsi­ble remarks”, the Chinese Embassy in Britain said in a statement on Wednesday.

British foreign secretary David Cameron said the law will have far-reaching implicatio­ns and further damage the rights and freedoms of Hong Kong people. He said it undermined the terms of the 1984 agreement under which Britain handed back its colony to China in 1997.

The United States said it believes the passing of the new bill has the potential to accelerate the closing of a once-open

society. And Australia’s top diplomat Penny Wong on Wednesday warned her visiting Chinese counterpar­t Wang Yi in Canberra that the new law would “further erode rights and freedoms” and have implicatio­ns far beyond China.

The United States, United Nations, European Union and Japan have also publicly spoken out against the law.

“China expresses strong dissatisfa­ction and firm opposition to some countries and institutio­ns that slander and smear” the legislatio­n, said Lin Jian, Chinese foreign ministry

spokespers­on when addressing a question on the law at a regular daily press briefing. “The firm determinat­ion to oppose any external interferen­ce in Hong Kong affairs is unswerving. Any attack on the protection of national security is a smear. It will never succeed, will be doomed to failure.”

Hong Kong returned to Chinese rule with the guarantee its freedoms, including freedom of speech, would be protected under a “one country, two systems” formula. Critics of a 2020 national security law say those freedoms have eroded swiftly.

 ?? AP ?? Hong Kong’s chief executive John Lee Ka-chiu (centre) applauds with lawmakers following the passing of the Basic Law Article 23 legislatio­n at the Legislativ­e Council in Hong Kong, on Tuesday.
AP Hong Kong’s chief executive John Lee Ka-chiu (centre) applauds with lawmakers following the passing of the Basic Law Article 23 legislatio­n at the Legislativ­e Council in Hong Kong, on Tuesday.

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