Muscat Daily

HK will ‘fearlessly take action’ against independen­ce talk

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Hong Kong, China - Hong Kong will ‘fearlessly take action’ against independen­ce calls and protect China’s interests, leader Carrie Lam said on Wednesday, as concerns grow that the city’s freedoms face an unpreceden­ted challenge from Beijing.

Lam’s annual policy address came as her government stood accused of attacking press freedoms for barring a Financial

Times journalist from working in Hong Kong after he chaired a talk by an independen­ce activist at the city’s press club.

Any talk of independen­ce incenses Beijing as Chinese Presi- dent Xi Jinping increasing­ly emphasises the importance of territoria­l integrity.

“I will not tolerate any acts that advocate Hong Kong’s independen­ce and threaten the country’s sovereignt­y, security and developmen­t interests,” Lam told legislator­s in a televised address. “We will fearlessly take action against such acts according to the law in order to safeguard the interests of the country and Hong Kong.”

Before the speech began, prodemocra­cy lawmakers were escorted from the legislativ­e chamber after shouting ‘Protect press freedom’ and waving placards. Hong Kong is governed under a semi-autonomous ‘One Country, Two Systems’ set-up, with freedoms unseen on the mainland that are protected by a 50-year agreement made when Britain handed the city back to China in 1997.

But there are serious concerns those rights are under threat.

Lam repeatedly emphasised the notion of ‘One Country’ in her speech and made no reference to freedom of expression and freedom of the press, a departure from last year’s address when she described those rights as ‘constituti­onal bulwarks’.

Questioned afterwards about the repeated ‘One Country’ references, Lam said the address had paid tribute to Hong Kong’s own ‘unique’ system and emphasised her role at the city’s helm.

“I’m not an ordinary mainland official,” she said.

Lam and her government have refused to explain why the FT’s Asia news editor Victor Mallet was denied a work visa.

Beijing regularly denies visas to foreign journalist­s on the mainland but it has not been a tactic used in Hong Kong.

The move has sparked con- siderable disquiet and anger among the city’s legal, business and media sectors and calls for explanatio­n from government­s around the world including Britain and the United States.

Lam did not directly answer when a reporter asked her on Wednesday for her response to Britain’s foreign secretary Jeremy Hunt, who described the visa denial as ‘politicall­y motivated’.

Lam instead criticised Britain’s six-monthly reports on Hong Kong, noting they still continue ‘despite the unificatio­n’.

Andy Chan’s pro-independen­ce party has been banned since his press club talk in August on the grounds it is a national security threat, the first such ban since 1997.

Lam said on Wednesday the ban was ‘strong testimony’ that the government would use existing laws to suppress independen­ce activism until controvers­ial anti-subversion law Article 23 is introduced. Article 23 is part of Hong Kong’s mini-constituti­on but has never been implemente­d due to public fears it would curtail freedoms.

Pro-democracy lawmaker Claudia Mo, one of those ejected from the chamber on Wednesday, accused Lam of using bullying tactics to suppress dissent.

“She’s trying to run Hong Kong with fear,’ Mo said.

Analyst Dixon Sing said Lam’s repeated use of ‘One Country’ and her insistence on using existing laws was a way to appease Beijing but to stall on Article 23, which could be a ‘bombshell’ for her leadership.

 ?? (AFP) ?? Pro-democracy politician Avery Ng protests before Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam delivers her policy address at the Legislativ­e Council, in Hong Kong on Wednesday
(AFP) Pro-democracy politician Avery Ng protests before Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam delivers her policy address at the Legislativ­e Council, in Hong Kong on Wednesday

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