Manila Bulletin

China passes feared Hong Kong security law

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HONG KONG, China (AFP) — China passed a sweeping national security law for Hong Kong on Tuesday, a historic move that critics and many western government­s fear will smother the finance hub’s freedoms and hollow out its autonomy.

The legislatio­n was unanimousl­y approved by China’s rubber-stamp parliament, little more than six weeks after it was first unveiled.

“It marks the end of Hong Kong that the world knew before,” prominent democracy campaigner Joshua Wong tweeted. “With sweeping powers and ill-defined law, the city will turn into a #secretpoli­cestate.”

The United States, Britain, the European Union, and the United Nations rights watchdog have all voiced fears the law could be used to stifle criticism of Beijing, which wields similar laws on the authoritar­ian mainland to crush dissent.

The law bypassed Hong Kong’s fractious legislatur­e and the wording was kept secret from the city’s 7.5 million inhabitant­s.

The opacity continued even after the law was passed, with silence from Beijing. Instead the news filtered out via pro-Beijing politician­s and local media outlets in Hong Kong.

At her weekly press conference on Tuesday morning, Hong Kong leader Carrie Lam — a pro-Beijing appointee — declined to comment on whether the law had been passed or what it contained.

“The fact that Hong Kong people will only come to know what’s really in this new law after the fact is more than prepostero­us,” Claudia Mo, an opposition lawmaker, told AFP.

‘Fundamenta­l change’ Hong Kong was guaranteed certain freedoms — as well as judicial and legislativ­e autonomy -- for 50 years in a deal known as “One Country, Two Systems.”

The formula formed the bedrock of the city’s transforma­tion into a world class business hub, bolstered by a reliable judiciary and political freedoms unseen on the mainland.

Critics have long accused Beijing of chipping away at that status, but they describe the security law as the most brazen move yet.

A summary of the law published by the official state agency Xinhua this month said China’s security agencies would be able to set up shop publicly in the city for the first time.

Beijing has also said it will have jurisdicti­on over some cases, toppling the legal firewall that has existed between Hong Kong and the mainland’s party-controlled courts since the 1997 handover.

Analysts said the security law radically restructur­es the relationsh­ip between Beijing and Hong Kong.

“It’s a fundamenta­l change that dramatical­ly undermines both the local and internatio­nal community’s confidence towards Hong Kong’s “One Country, Two Systems’’ model and its status as a robust financial centre,” Hong Kong political analyst Dixon Sing told AFP.

Beijing and Hong Kong’s government said the laws will only target a minority of people, will not harm political freedoms in the city and will restore business confidence after a year of historic pro-democracy protests.

Washington — which has embarked on a trade war with China — has said the security law means Hong Kong no longer enjoys sufficient autonomy from the mainland to justify special status.

In a largely symbolic move, the United States on Monday ended sensitive defense exports to Hong Kong over the law.

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