Business Day

Hong Kong leader withdraws controvers­ial extraditio­n bill

Action is unlikely to end protests as it meets only one of five demands

- Iain Marlow and Blake Schmidt Hong Kong

Hong Kong’s embattled leader, Carrie Lam, says she has formally withdrawn legislatio­n to allow extraditio­ns to China, an about-face that may help ease but not end months of unrest in the Asian financial centre.

Lam announced the move in a televised address on Wednesday, after a meeting with proestabli­shment politician­s including local legislator­s and the city’s representa­tives to national legislativ­e bodies. She also announced an independen­t study of the government’s performanc­e and reaffirmed her commitment to reviewing the police’s response to the protests.

“The things that have happened in the past two months have made everyone shocked and sad,” Lam said, seated at a desk, her hands folded.

“People are anxious. They want to move on from the current deadlock now.”

Hong Kong stocks jumped, led by property developers. The benchmark Hang Seng index rose 3.9% the biggest gain since November before her speech, though futures slipped after other protester demands went unmet in her remarks.

The move follows a weekend of demonstrat­ions that were some of the fiercest clashes between protesters and riot police. Activists have lobbed petrol bombs and set bonfires in the streets, while police officers fired teargas, rubber bullets and pepper spray, making more than 1,100 arrests since early June.

The turmoil that followed Lam’s attempt to introduce the ill-fated bill including mass marches that drew more than 1million people and protests that shut the city’s busy airport have turned into the biggest crisis for Beijing’s rule over the former British colony since it returned to Chinese rule in 1997.

Aggressive police tactics, threats by Beijing to deploy troops and sweeping arrests of pro-democracy figures have raised fears about Hong Kong’s autonomy and drawn internatio­nal condemnati­on.

Though Lam had previously suspended the bill saying it was “dead her move did little to appease demonstrat­ors, who continued protesting and expanded their demands to include calls for greater democratic freedom.

Still, it was not immediatel­y clear whether the formal withdrawal would end the protests. The action meets only one of five main demands, which also include calls for an independen­t commission of inquiry into police violence, an amnesty for those who have been arrested and universal suffrage.

“If Carrie is genuine in wanting to restore peace to Hong Kong society, a mere withdrawal of the bill is far from enough,” said Alvin Yeung, a pro-democratic MP. “Hong Kong people will not be satisfied, which is absolutely reasonable after three months of blood, sweat and tears, while police brutality remains our biggest concern.”

Withdrawin­g the bill may ease anger and bring down the violence but is unlikely on its own to appease demands for greater democracy and accountabi­lity over police tactics, said Samson Yuen, an assistant professor of political science at Lingnan University, who has conducted surveys of demonstrat­ors. “Since the core slogan has always been ‘five demands, every one of them’, they will continue to fight for the rest.”

Opponents had said the bill threatened the city’s tenuous autonomy from China and undermined its reputation as a global financial centre. Lam’s Beijing-backed government had faced growing public concern that China, emboldened by its rising economic power, was less committed to Hong Kong’s colonial-era guarantees of independen­t courts, free speech and capitalist markets.

On Tuesday, Lam addressed a Reuters report of a leaked audio recording in which she said she had “very, very, very limited” room to meet the demands of protesters and would quit “if I had the choice”. Speaking to reporters, she said she had “not even contemplat­ed to discuss a resignatio­n with the central people’s government”.

Meanwhile, Chinese officials overseeing Hong Kong softened their tone towards the city’s protesters, saying peaceful demonstrat­ions are allowed under the law, even as it ruled out a fundamenta­l demand for direct democracy that has fuelled the unrest.

They also reaffirmed support for Lam and her government.

The extraditio­n bill was originally proposed by Hong Kong’s government in February and covered mainland China and other jurisdicti­ons that do not have an extraditio­n agreement with Hong Kong. Lam and the law’s backers originally defended it as necessary to ensure the city would not become a refuge for suspected fugitives.

Her push to pass it before the end of the legislativ­e period in July was sparked by the case of a local man accused of murdering his girlfriend in Taiwan.

He was arrested in Hong Kong and convicted of money laundering but could not be sent back to the island to stand trial as there was no framework to do so.

 ?? /AFP ?? Staging a U-turn Hong Kong CEO Carrie Lam speaks to the media in Hong Kong in this file photo. On Wednesday she formally withdrew a loathed extraditio­n bill.
/AFP Staging a U-turn Hong Kong CEO Carrie Lam speaks to the media in Hong Kong in this file photo. On Wednesday she formally withdrew a loathed extraditio­n bill.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa