The Manila Times

UK offers HK people immigratio­n rights

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Britain on Wednesday (Thursday in Manila) extended Hong Kong residents immigratio­n rights after calling China’s new security law for Hong Kong a “serious” violation of the former United Kingdom territory’s autonomy.

The legislatio­n has been widely denounced in the West since it was imposed on the former British colony on Tuesday, June 30. “We stand for rules and obligation­s,” Prime Minister Boris Johnson told parliament.

“And we think that is the scientific basis for our internatio­nal relations and the enactment, and deposition of this national security law constitute­s a clear and serious breach of the Sino-British Joint Declaratio­n,” he added.

Johnson said London had warned Beijing that it would introduce a new route for those with British National Overseas status to enter the UK, granting them the right to live and work in Britain and then to apply for citizenshi­p. “And that is precisely what we will do now,” Johnson said.

Britain’s new offer applies to an estimated 3 million Hongkonger­s, but Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab refused to be drawn about how many would take up the offer. Hong Kong was under UK jurisdicti­on until Britain handed it to China in 1997 with a guarantee that Beijing would preserve the city’s judicial and legislativ­e autonomy for 50 years.

But critics say the new security law, passed by Beijing’s rubberstam­p parliament this week, tests the limits of a “One Country, Two Systems” deal that formally signed into internatio­nal law in 1984.

Raab said Hongkonger­s with BNO status and their dependents would be offered the right to work or study in Britain for five years.

They would then have the right to apply for settled status and then possible citizenshi­p. He said there would be “no quotas” for the settled and citizenshi­p route, in what he called a “bespoke” immigratio­n system for Hong Kong.

“We will not duck our historic responsibi­lity to it people,” Raab said, calling the national security law’s passing a “grave and deeply disturbing step.”

He said China had not only broken the joint declaratio­n but its own basic laws on Hong Kong, and internatio­nal obligation­s to respect autonomy and rights in the territory.

“China through this national security legislatio­n is not living up to its promises to the people of Hong Kong. We will live up to our promises to them,” he told lawmakers.

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