The Borneo Post

First arrests under new HK security law

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HONG KONG: Hong Kong police made the first arrests under Beijing’s new national security law yesterday as the anniversar­y of the city’s handover to China was met by thousands defying a ban on protests.

Police deployed water cannon, pepper spray and tear gas throughout the a ernoon, arresting more than 180 people, seven of them for breaching the new national security law.

The confrontat­ions came a day a er China imposed its controvers­ial legislatio­n on the restless city, a historic move decried by many Western government­s as an unpreceden­ted assault on the finance hub’s liberties and autonomy.

Beijing said the law would restore stability. But its imposition sparked the worst unrest in months.

Certain political views and symbols became illegal overnight, including showing support for Hong Kong, Taiwan, Xinjiang and Tibet independen­ce.

Police said the first two national security arrests were for people possessing signs promoting independen­ce.

“Advocacy for independen­ce of Hong Kong is against the law,” security minister John Lee told reporters.

Many of those protesting on Wednesday chanted independen­ce slogans.

“What this authoritar­ian regime wants to do is to terrorise the people and stop them from coming out,” Chris To, a 49-yearold protester, told AFP.

Police said one officer was stabbed in the shoulder as he tried to make an arrest.

Opprobrium over the law poured in from critics and western government­s — led by the US — over fears the law will usher in a new era of mainlandst­yle political repression.

Under a deal ahead of the 1997 handover from Britain, authoritar­ian China guaranteed Hong Kong civil liberties as well as judicial and legislativ­e autonomy until 2047 in a formula known as ‘ One Country, Two Systems’.

“(China) promised 50 years of freedom to the Hong Kong people, and gave them only 23,” US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said as he promised unspecifie­d countermea­sures.

But Beijing said foreign countries should keep quiet about the law, while Hong Kong leader Carrie Lam hailed the legislatio­n as the ‘most important developmen­t’ since the city’s return to Beijing’s rule.

A er huge and o en violent pro-democracy protests last year, authoritie­s have shown zero tolerance for even peaceful rallies in recent months.

Gatherings of more than 50 people are currently banned under anti-coronaviru­s laws even though local transmissi­ons have ended.

The July 1 anniversar­y has long been a polarising day in the city.

Beijing loyalists celebrate Hong Kong’s return to the Chinese motherland a er a century and a half of what they consider humiliatin­g colonial rule by Britain.

Helicopter­s yesterday flew across Victoria Harbour carrying a large Chinese flag and a smaller

Hong Kong pennant, while a barge appeared with a banner reading ‘Welcome the Enacting of the National Security Law’ in giant Chinese characters.

Small groups of Beijing supporters waved Chinese flags in several local neighbourh­oods, untroubled by police.

Democracy advocates have long used the date to hold large rallies as popular anger towards Beijing swells — although this year’s event was banned for the first time in 17 years.

During huge pro-democracy demonstrat­ions last year, the city’s legislatur­e was besieged and trashed by protesters.

The ‘One Country, Two Systems’ formula helped cement Hong Kong’s status as a worldclass business hub, bolstered by an independen­t judiciary and political freedoms unseen on the mainland.

But critics have long accused Beijing of chipping away at that status and describe the new security law as the most brazen move yet.

It was passed in just six weeks, skipping Hong Kong’s fractious legislatur­e, and the precise wording was kept secret until it came into effect late Tuesday.

It outlaws subversion, secession, terrorism and colluding with foreign forces to undermine national security, with sentences of up to life in prison.

It also topples the legal firewall that has existed between the city’s judiciary and the mainland’s party-controlled courts. — AFP

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 ?? — AFP photos ?? Riot police (le ) deploy pepper spray toward journalist­s (right) as protesters gathered for a rally against a new national security law in Hong Kong on the 23rd anniversar­y of the city’s handover from Britain to China.
— AFP photos Riot police (le ) deploy pepper spray toward journalist­s (right) as protesters gathered for a rally against a new national security law in Hong Kong on the 23rd anniversar­y of the city’s handover from Britain to China.
 ??  ?? Lam (centre) poses with Justice Secretary Teresa Cheng (le ) and Lee (right) while holding copies of the new national security law during a press conference at the government headquarte­rs in Hong Kong.
Lam (centre) poses with Justice Secretary Teresa Cheng (le ) and Lee (right) while holding copies of the new national security law during a press conference at the government headquarte­rs in Hong Kong.

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