The Borneo Post

China tells Taiwan to stay out of Hong Kong debate

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BEIJING: China called yesterday on Taiwan to stay out Hong Kong’s affairs, saying self-ruled Taiwan was ‘ talking nonsense’ about the former British colony and warning it not to damage Hong Kong’s stability.

Chinese leaders are concerned about a fledgling independen­ce movement in Hong Kong, which returned to mainland rule in 1997 with a promise of autonomy, and recent protests in the city.

Beijing staged a rare interpreta­tion of Hong Kong’s mini- constituti­on, the Basic Law, in early November to effectivel­y bar pro-independen­ce city lawmakers, Baggio Leung and Yau Wai- ching, from taking office there.

The pair lost an appeal yesterday into an earlier Hong Kong court ruling that disqualifi­ed them after they insulted China while taking their oaths last month.

Three Court of Appeal judges ruled that Yau, 25, and Leung, 30, had no grounds to re-take their oath as a matter of law.

Yau and Leung, elected in September polls, have yet to confirm earlier plans to take their case to Hong Kong’s highest court, the Court of Final Appeal.

Asked about comments from legislator­s from Taiwan’s ruling Democratic Progressiv­e Party ( DPP), which favours the island’s formal independen­ce, offering support for Leung and Yau, China’s Taiwan Affairs Office said independen­ce activists from both sides were trying to link up and sow chaos in Hong Kong.

“Compatriot­s on both sides of the Taiwan Strait, especially those in Hong Kong, should be on high alert for this,” spokesman Ma Xiaoguang told reporters in Beijing.

“The words and deeds of Baggio Leung and Yau Wai- ching run contrary to mainstream public opinion in Hong Kong and Hong Kong resident’s basic interests, but relevant parties in Taiwan are helping them, to what intent?” Ma asked.

“We advise the Taiwan side not to talk nonsense about the Hong Kong issue, interfere in Hong Kong’s enforcemen­t of ‘one country, two systems’, or damage Hong Kong’s prosperity and stability,” he said. — Reuters

 ??  ?? A Taiwan Coast Guard ship (left) extinguish­es a fire on a cargo ship during a rescue drill near the coast of Itu Aba, which the Taiwanese call Taiping, at the South China Sea. — Reuter photo
A Taiwan Coast Guard ship (left) extinguish­es a fire on a cargo ship during a rescue drill near the coast of Itu Aba, which the Taiwanese call Taiping, at the South China Sea. — Reuter photo
 ??  ?? An aerial view shows of Itu Aba, which the Taiwanese call Taiping, in the South China Sea. — Reuters photo
An aerial view shows of Itu Aba, which the Taiwanese call Taiping, in the South China Sea. — Reuters photo

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