Manawatu Standard

Hkpeople betrayed – former governor

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The last British governor of Hong Kong said China has betrayed the semiautono­mous territory by tightening control over the city it had promised could keep freedoms not found on the mainland.

‘‘What we are seeing is a new Chinese dictatorsh­ip,’’ Chris Patten told an interview with The Times of London. ‘‘I think the Hong Kong people have been betrayed by China, which has proved once again that you can’t trust it further than you can throw it.’’

He said the British government ‘‘should make it clear that what we are seeing is a complete destructio­n of the Joint Declaratio­n,’’ a legal document under which the former British colony was returned to China in 1997 under a ‘‘one country, two systems’’ framework.

It gives Hong Kong its own legal system and Western-style freedoms until 2047. But many fear those are being chipped away after authoritie­s clamped down on massive pro-democracy protests that rocked the city last year.

Last week, Hong Kong prodemocra­cy lawmakers criticised China’s move to enact national security legislatio­n in the territory, which was submitted on the opening day of China’s national legislativ­e session. It would forbid secessioni­st and subversive activity, as well as foreign interferen­ce and terrorism.

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo called the move ‘‘a death knell for the high degree of autonomy’’ that Beijing had promised Hong Kong.

Patten said he believed that ‘‘one country, two systems,’’ the treaty logged at the United Nations, would be enough to protect Hong Kong’s capitalist economy and its way of life.

‘‘China cheats, it tries to screw things in its own favour, and if you ever point this out their ‘wolf warrior’ diplomats try to bully and hector you into submission,’’ he said. ‘‘It’s got to stop otherwise the world is going to be amuch less safe place and liberal democracy around the world is going to be destabilis­ed.’’

He called on Britain to do more to stand up to China and protect Hong Kong under its legal obligation­s.

‘‘Britain has a moral, economic and legal duty to stand up for Hong Kong,’’ he said. ‘‘The real danger is that we are entirely limp on this. We have obligation­s because we signed the agreement . If we don’t have any responsibi­lities for the people of Hong Kong and their way of life, who do we have responsibi­lity for?’’

China’s foreign ministry said last week Hong Kong is China’s internal affair and ‘‘no foreign country has the right to intervene’’. – AP

 ?? AP ?? Pro-democracy activist Joshua Wong, left, speaks to the media about Beijing’s national security legislatio­n proposal for Hong Kong. Inset, Chris Patten.
AP Pro-democracy activist Joshua Wong, left, speaks to the media about Beijing’s national security legislatio­n proposal for Hong Kong. Inset, Chris Patten.
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