Kuwait Times

China: No space for HK independen­ce

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There is no space for Hong Kong independen­ce in the “one country, two systems” agreement under which Beijing governs the former British colony, but there can be tolerance for difference­s in their systems, a senior Chinese official said. Chinese leaders are increasing­ly concerned about a fledgling independen­ce movement in Hong Kong, which returned to mainland rule in 1997 with a promise of autonomy known as “one country, two systems”, and recent protests in the city. The head of China’s Hong Kong Macau Affairs Office, Wang Guangya, told proBeijing Hong Kong magazine The Bauhinia that “under ‘one country, two systems’ there is absolutely no space for ‘Hong Kong independen­ce’”, in comments carried in the ruling Communist Party’s People’s Daily on Saturday.

“Hong Kong is an inseparabl­e part of the country, and in no situation is ‘Hong Kong independen­ce’ allowed. This is a bottom line that cannot be touched in ‘one country, two systems’,” Wang said. As “one country, two systems” is new, it has no ready-made experience to draw from, and it’s normal that in this process “new situations, new problems and new challenges” will arise, he added.

“You can’t expect it to be all plain sailing,” Wang said. “The central government has confidence in and patience with Hong Kong. As long as the ‘one country’ principle is not damaged, the difference­s in the ‘two systems’ absolutely can be tolerated and respected,” he added. China’s parliament last month staged a rare interpreta­tion of the Basic Law, Hong Kong’s miniconsti­tution, to effectivel­y bar pro-independen­ce city lawmakers from taking office there.

In separate comments from the same interview reported by the official Xinhua news agency late Friday, Wang said the interpreta­tion did not harm the independen­ce of Hong Kong’s legal system, but that that independen­ce could not limit the Chinese parliament’s ability to interpret the Basic Law. “It needs to be pointed out that the independen­ce of the legal system is an important principle of the rule of law in Hong Kong, and the central government has always cherished and protected the independen­ce of Hong Kong’s legal system.” — Reuters

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