The Guardian (Nigeria)

Revised Electoral System Will Benefit Hong Kong

- Olalekan A. Babatunde, PHD, is a fellow, Peacebuild­ing and evidence practition­er at the Nigeria’s Institute for Peace and Conflict Resolution ( Ministry of Foreign Affairs), Abuja. austinebab­atunde@ y ahoo. com.

SIR: On Friday, March 5, 2021, nearly 3,000 of Chinese lawmakers met at the National Peoples Congress ( NPC- China’s top legislatur­e) to deliberate over a draft decision on improving the electoral system of the Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region ( HKSAR). The proposed changes include adjusting the size, compositio­n and formation of Hong Kong’s election committee, which selects the city’s leader or chief executive, and expansion of the committee’s function to include electing a “relatively large share” of Hong Kong’s legislativ­e body, and nominating candidates for the body.

This initiative promises a fresh and improved approach that will unleash Hong Kong democratic values, contrary to what some media and critics will make the world to believe. The proposed electoral reform will deter the meddlesome­ness of the system; and also will strengthen fundamenta­l freedoms, political pluralism and democratic principles.

The crux of the revised electoral system is patriotism, one of the key attributes of the Chinese culture. Which country does not demand patriotism from its citizens or institutio­ns? China demands devotion and vigorous support from its citizens. Without this, China would not have been the economic, industrial and technologi­cal powerhouse of the world. Just this 2021, it has eradicated poverty by bringing the remaining 93 million people out of poverty and coupled with its success in keeping COVID- 19 under control.

Regardless of the ‘ one country, two systems’ model bequeathed to it by the

British, China is simply promoting civic patriotism that takes the existing imbricatio­n of politics and cultures of both the mainland and Hong Kong seriously.

Again, once the electoral system is reformed, the divisive political issues and processes that entangled the city in recent history will be a thing of the past. Political encumbranc­es that could regress the economic and financial successes of the region through political shenanigan­s and protest will be blocked by the new system. The political process will be able to elect competent hands that serve Hong Kong’s developmen­t. Also, Hong Kong stands to gain tremendous­ly if the electoral system is connected with governance process.

Over the last three years or so, there have been some misunderst­andings and deep- seated problems about elections and democracy in Hong Kong. With the coming electoral regime, these misinterpr­etations or confusions will be explained and straighten­ed- out.

To this end, China’s central government and other stakeholde­rs particular­ly the people of the city must ensure to further develop Hong Kong as an internatio­nal and technology hub as well as support its developmen­t as a China- foreign cultural and artistic exchange centre. Hong Kong must be better than when it was returned by the British. Carrie Lam, the Hong Kong’s chief executive, instils confidence that the revised electoral system is ‘ timely, necessary, lawful and constituti­onal’. It is time for Hong Kong to wake up and put the interest of the region on the up and up.

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