Business Day (Nigeria)

HK begins crackdown despite foreign condemnati­on

Police arrest protesters under new security law on anniversar­y of city’s handover to China

- NICOLLE LIU AND JOE LEAHY

Hong Kong police have made their first arrests under a sweeping new national security law imposed on the Asian financial hub by Beijing that has drawn internatio­nal condemnati­on.

A day after Chinese president Xi Jinping signed the legislatio­n into law in Beijing, Hong Kong police on Wednesday cracked down on thousands of protesters who defied Beijing to hold an annual march to mark the anniversar­y of the territory’s handover from the UK to China in 1997.

Riot police pepper-sprayed and detained protesters in a busy shopping district after officers displayed a banner warning them that they might be committing a secessiono­r subversion-related crime by joining the demonstrat­ion.

Police tweeted a picture of a man arrested for carrying a Hong Kong independen­ce flag — an illegal item under the new law, which punishes activities such as campaignin­g for secession with up to life imprisonme­nt.

“This is the first arrest since the law came into force,” police said, adding that they had detained more than 300 people for alleged offences including violating the national security law, illegal assembly, obstructin­g police and possession of offensive weapons.

Police said one officer was stabbed in the arm while making an arrest. Protesters also blocked roads and violated coronaviru­s limits in Hong Kong on large gatherings.

The US, Europe and Australia have condemned the legislatio­n, which critics said undermined the high degree of autonomy and rule of law promised to Hong Kong on its handover 23 years ago.

Terrorism, subversion and collusion with foreign elements will also attract penalties of up to life imprisonme­nt under the new law.

One Hong Kong protester, Hannah, an 18-year-old secondary school student, said the national security law had “made Hong Kong like China”.

“We have more fear compared to before . . . but we have to show the world we’re still resisting,” she said, standing in front of a fire protesters had lit in the middle of the road.

Other protesters gathered in impromptu groups away from the police, where they raised flags with “independen­ce” written on them.

In the US, the administra­tion of President Donald Trump said the security law was a “violation” of China’s commitment­s under the Sino-british Joint Declaratio­n that establishe­d Hong Kong as an autonomous region.

“As Beijing now treats Hong

Kong as ‘ One Country, One System,’ so must the United States,” said John Ullyot, the National Security Council spokespers­on.

“The United States will continue to take strong actions against those who smothered Hong Kong’s freedom and autonomy. We urge Beijing to reverse course immediatel­y.”

But Zhang Xiaoming, deputy director of the Hong Kong and Macau Affairs Office, said at a press conference on Wednesday that China would retaliate if the US launched sanctions.

“Of course we’re not intimidate­d. Gone are the days when Chinese people had to be at somebody’s disposal or rely on others for the air one breathes,” he said.

Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam said the legislatio­n demonstrat­ed Beijing’s determinat­ion to improve the functionin­g of “one country, two systems”, the model of governance under which Hong

Kong has enjoyed a high degree of autonomy.

She said Hong Kong had failed to better educate and promote “the nation’s history and culture” to the city’s young people.

The law will allow Chinese state security agencies to operate openly in Hong Kong for the first time.

The legislatio­n not only applies to people in Hong Kong but to those not in the territory. That means that foreign nationals who speak in favour of independen­ce for the territory, or advocate sanctions against China, could be prosecuted upon entering Hong Kong or mainland China.

Damaging public transport with intent to cause “serious social harm” is considered a terrorist act under the new law, which also gives Beijing the power to adjudicate national security crimes when requested by Hong Kong’s new state security bureau.

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