The Sunday Guardian

Xi wARNs HoNg koNg AgAiNst pRo-democRAcy pRotests

Xi did not meet people in the street or listen to any pro-democracy voices.

- REUTERS

Chinese President Xi Jinping swore in Hong Kong’s new leader on Saturday with a stark warning that Beijing won’t tolerate any challenge to its authority in the divided city as it marked the 20th anniversar­y of its return from Britain to China.

Police blocked roads, preventing pro- democracy protesters from getting to the harbour- front venue close to where the last colonial governor, Chris Patten, tearfully handed back Hong Kong to China in the pouring rain in 1997.

“Any attempt to endanger China’s sovereignt­y and security, challenge the power of the central government ... or use Hong Kong to carry out infiltrati­on and sabotage activities against the mainland is an act that crosses the red line and is absolutely impermissi­ble,” Xi said.

He also referred to the “humiliatio­n and sorrow” China suffered during the first Opium War in the early 1840s that led to the ceding of Hong Kong to the British.

Hong Kong has been racked by demands for full democracy and, more recently, by calls by some pockets of protesters for independen­ce, a subject that is anathema to Beijing.

Xi’s words, in a 30-minute speech, were his strongest yet to the city amid concerns over what some perceive as increased meddling by Beijing, illustrate­d in recent years by the abduction by mainland agents of some Hong Kong bookseller­s and Beijing’s efforts in disqualify­ing two pro-independen­ce lawmakers elected to the city legislatur­e.

“It’s a more frank and pointed way of dealing with the problems (in Hong Kong),” said former senior Hong Kong government adviser Lau Siu-kai on Hong Kong’s Cable Television.

“The central government’s power hasn’t been sufficient­ly respected... they’re concerned about this.”

The tightly choreograp­hed visit was full of pro-China rhetoric amid a virtually unpreceden­ted security lockdown. Xi did not make contact with the people in the street or with any prodemocra­cy voices, forgoing an opportunit­y to lower the political heat.

Under Hong Kong’s miniConsti­tution, the Basic Law, the financial hub is guaranteed wide-ranging autonomy for “at least 50 years” after 1997 under a “one country, two systems” formula praised by Xi. It also specifies universal suffrage as an eventual goal.

But Beijing’s refusal to grant full democracy triggered nearly three months of street protests in 2014 that at times erupted into violent clashes and posed one of the greatest populist challenges to Beijing in decades.

Thousands gathered in the afternoon in a sprawling park named after Britain’s Queen Victoria, demanding Xi allow universal suffrage.

“This protest is the most urgent in the past 20 years,” said lawmaker Eddie Chu, as some demonstrat­ors marched with yellow umbrellas, a symbol of democratic activism in the city, and held aloft banners denouncing China’s Communist “one party rule”.

Others criticised China’s Foreign Ministry which on Friday said the “Joint Dec- laration” with Britain over Hong Kong, a treaty laying the blueprint over how the city would be ruled after 1997, “no longer has any practical significan­ce”.

Xi, dressed in a dark suit and striped red tie, in the morning addressed a packed hall of mostly pro-Beijing establishm­ent figures, after swearing in Hong Kong’s first female leader, Carrie Lam, who was strongly backed by China. Lam, speaking in Mandarin instead of the Cantonese dialect widely used in Hong Kong and southern China, said she wanted to create a harmonious society and bring down astronomic­al housing prices that have also sown social discord.

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