Irish Independent

Britain warns China new Hong Kong laws ‘in conflict of treaty’

- Stephanie Nebehay GENEVA

BRITAIN said yesterday China’s plan to impose national security legislatio­n on Hong Kong would undermine the autonomy in the former British colony and could threaten its rights and freedoms.

Britain returned Hong Kong to Chinese rule in 1997 with the guarantee of freedoms, such as an independen­t judiciary and right to protest, for 50 years.

“The imposition of the proposed law lies in direct conflict with China’s internatio­nal obligation­s under the Joint Declaratio­n, a treaty agreed by the UK and China and registered with the United Nations,” Julian Braithwait­e, Britain’s ambassador to the UN in Geneva, told the Human Rights Council.

He urged China to engage with Hong Kong’s people, institutio­ns, and judiciary to “ensure it maintains Hong Kong’s high degree of autonomy and rights and freedoms”.

There was no immediate reaction by China’s delegation to the 47-member state forum.

Pang Kwang Hyok, deputy ambassador at North Korea’s mission, voiced concern at “certain countries’ attempt to use Hong Kong-related issues to interfere in China’s domestic affairs”. Hong Kong was “an inseparabl­e part” where China’s sovereignt­y is exercised and its constituti­on is applied, he said.

Hong Kong’s national security legislatio­n would not punish people retroactiv­ely, a senior Chinese official said, touching on a key question raised by local residents, diplomats and foreign investors over the controvers­ial law.

Beijing last month moved to directly impose the legislatio­n on Hong Kong in a bid to tackle secession, subversion and foreign interferen­ce.

Hong Kong was rocked by months of sometimes violent anti-China, pro-democracy unrest last year, with protesters angry at what they see as meddling by Communist Party rulers in Beijing in Hong Kong’s affairs.

 ?? PHOTO: GETTY ?? Vigil:
Mourners at a memorial one year on from the death of protester Marco Ling-kit Leung at a Hong Kong rally.
PHOTO: GETTY Vigil: Mourners at a memorial one year on from the death of protester Marco Ling-kit Leung at a Hong Kong rally.

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