The Asian Age

China reviews controvers­ial security bill for Hong Kong Beijing said it is determined to enact the law, its passage expected tomorrow

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Beijing, June 28: China’s legislatur­e on Sunday began reviewing a controvers­ial national security bill for Hong Kong that critics worldwide say will severely compromise human rights in the semi-autonomous Chinese territory.

The National People’s Congress Standing Committee took up the matter at the start of a three-day session, China’s official Xinhua News Agency reported. China has said it is determined to enact the law, and its passage is expected by Tuesday. The US says it will respond by ending favourable trading terms granted to the former British colony after it passed to Chinese control in 1997.

The Senate on Thursday unanimousl­y approved a bill to impose sanctions on businesses and individual­s — including the police — that undermine Hong Kong’s autonomy or restrict freedoms promised to the city’s residents.

The Senate bill targets police units that have cracked down on Hong Kong protesters, as well as Chinese Communist Party officials responsibl­e for imposing the national security law. The measure also would impose sanctions on banks that do business with entities found to violate the law.

Last week, a former United Nations human rights chief and eight former UN special envoys urged the body’s secretary-general to appoint a special envoy on Hong Kong over what they said is a pending “humanitari­an tragedy”.

Britain has said it would grant passports to as many as three million of Hong Kong’s 7.8 million people. Beijing has denounced all such moves as gross interferen­ce in its internal affairs. The law would criminalis­e secession, subversion of state power, terrorist activities and colluding with foreign forces to endanger national security.

Critics say Hong Kong’s legal statutes already account for such matters and that Beijing is determined to use the law to pursue political opponents. The central government in Beijing also would set up a national security office in Hong Kong to collect and analyze intelligen­ce and deal with criminal cases related to national security. Few details have been released, but it appears that Beijing will have ultimate power over government appointmen­ts, further reducing the relative independen­ce it promised to Hong Kong in a 1984 joint declaratio­n with Britain that is considered an internatio­nal treaty.

The measures have been widely seen as the most significan­t erosion to date of Hong Kong’s British-style rule of law and high degree of autonomy that China promised Hong Kong would have under a “one country, two systems” principle. China has long demanded such a law for Hong Kong, but efforts were shelved in the face of massive protests in 2003.

Beijing appeared to have lost its patience in the face of widespread and often violent anti-government protests last year, moving to circumvent Hong Kong’s own legislativ­e council and enact the law.

 ?? — AFP ?? A man (centre L) gestures the protest slogan “Five demands and not one less” as he is arrested and led onto a bus by police during a protest against China’s planned national security law in Hong Kong on Sunday.
— AFP A man (centre L) gestures the protest slogan “Five demands and not one less” as he is arrested and led onto a bus by police during a protest against China’s planned national security law in Hong Kong on Sunday.

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