The Jerusalem Post

Beijing warns Washington it will retaliate over moves on Hong Kong

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BEIJING (Reuters) – China on Monday said US attempts to harm Chinese interests will be met with firm countermea­sures. It criticized a US decision to begin ending special treatment for Hong Kong as well as actions against Chinese students and companies.

China’s parliament last week voted to move forward with imposing national-security legislatio­n on Hong Kong, which US President Donald Trump said on Friday was a tragedy for the people of the city and violated China’s promise to protect its autonomy.

Trump ordered his administra­tion to begin the process of eliminatin­g special US treatment for Hong Kong to punish China, ranging from extraditio­n treatment to export controls.

But he stopped short of calling an immediate end to privileges that have helped the former British colony remain a global financial center.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian said China firmly opposed the US steps.

“The announced measures severely interfere with China’s internal affairs, damage

US-China relations and will harm both sides,” he told reporters during a regular briefing. “China is firmly opposed to this.”

“Any words or actions by the US that harm China’s interests will meet with China’s firm counteratt­ack,” Zhao said.

But Hong Kong shares surged more than 3% on Monday as investors took comfort that Trump did not immediatel­y end the special US privileges.

At the close of trade, the Hang Seng index was up 3.36%, its biggest one-day percentage gain since March 25.

“Chinese policymake­rs would likely want to see precisely what the US implements before responding with further policy adjustment­s or retaliatio­n of their own,” Goldman Sachs wrote in a note on Sunday.

In making his Friday announceme­nt, Trump used some of his toughest rhetoric yet against China, saying it had broken its word over Hong Kong’s autonomy by moving to impose the new national-security legislatio­n, and the territory no longer warranted US economic privileges.

China’s “malfeasanc­e” was responsibl­e for massive suffering and economic damage worldwide, he said.

The United States would also impose sanctions on individual­s seen as responsibl­e for “smothering – absolutely smothering – Hong Kong’s freedom,” Trump said. He did not name any of the potential sanctions targets.

Trump gave no time frame for the action, suggesting he may be trying to buy time before deciding whether to implement the most drastic measures, which have drawn strong resistance from US companies that operate in

Hong Kong.

Earlier, Hong Kong’s Beijing-backed government told the United States to keep out of the national-security debate. It warned that withdrawal of the financial hub’s special status could backfire on the US economy.

 ?? (Tyrone Siu/Reuters) ?? A PRO-DEMOCRACY demonstrat­or waves the British colonial Hong Kong flag yesterday as another one holds a sign during a protest against new national security legislatio­n in Hong Kong.
(Tyrone Siu/Reuters) A PRO-DEMOCRACY demonstrat­or waves the British colonial Hong Kong flag yesterday as another one holds a sign during a protest against new national security legislatio­n in Hong Kong.

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