Business Day

China stamps its power in the heart of Hong Kong’s protest area

• Pro-democracy slogans, songs and books are banned, and police have arrested at least 10 people, including a 15-year-old, for suspected threats to national security

- Yanni Chow Donny Kwok Hong Kong

China opened its powerful national security office in Hong Kong on Wednesday, turning a hotel near a city centre park that has been one of the most popular venues for prodemocra­cy protests into its new headquarte­rs.

The office, which operates beyond the scrutiny of local courts or other institutio­ns, will oversee the Hong Kong government’s enforcemen­t of the sweeping national security legislatio­n Beijing imposed on the city last week.

The legislatio­n gives its agents, operating openly in the global financial hub for the first time, enforcemen­t powers. It allows them to take suspects across the border for trials in Communist Party-controlled courts and gives them special privileges, including that Hong Kong authoritie­s cannot search or detain them, or even inspect their vehicles.

It was unclear how many mainland agents will be stationed in the former Metropark Hotel, a 266-room, 33-storey building in the shopping and commercial district of Causeway Bay, near Victoria Park.

At the opening ceremony, chief of the security office Zheng Yanxiong said he would enforce the law strictly “without infringing on the legitimate rights and interests of any individual or organisati­on”.

Luo Huining, head of China’s liaison office in the city, Beijing’s top representa­tive office, said the office is “the gatekeeper of national security” and people who love China and Hong Kong welcome it.

“Those with ulterior motives and who are anti-China and seek to destabilis­e Hong Kong have not only stigmatise­d the office but also smeared the legal system and rule of law on the Chinese mainland in an attempt to stir up unnecessar­y worries and fears among Hong Kong residents,” he said.

The new security law has pushed China’s freest city onto a more authoritar­ian path and drawn condemnati­on from some Western government­s, lawyers and rights groups.

It punishes acts of secession, subversion, terrorism and collusion with foreign forces with up to life in prison. Police have arrested at least 10 people, including a 15-year-old, under it for suspected threats to China’s national security.

Critics fear it will crush coveted freedoms in the Chineserul­ed city, while supporters say it will bring stability after a year of sometimes violent protests that plunged the former British colony into its biggest crisis in decades.

RED LINE

Hong Kong and Beijing officials insist that rights and freedoms will remain intact but say national security is a “red line”.

The new security legislatio­n has already started to change life in Hong Kong.

Hong Kong authoritie­s banned school students from singing Glory to Hong Kong on Wednesday, the unofficial anthem of the pro-democracy protest movement.

Secretary for education Kevin Yeung said students should not participat­e in class boycotts, chant slogans, form human chains or sing songs that contain political messages, referring specifical­ly to the popular protest anthem.

ACTIVISTS HAVE DISBANDED THEIR ORGANISATI­ONS OR FLED. SHOPS HAVE REMOVED PROTEST-THEMED PRODUCTS AND DECORATION­S

Books written by some prodemocra­cy activists and politician­s have been removed from public libraries. The “Liberate Hong Kong! Revolution of our times” slogan is now illegal. Activists have disbanded their organisati­ons or fled. Shops have removed protest-themed products and decoration­s.

CEO Carrie Lam has said the security law is mild compared with that of other countries, without naming them, but prodemocra­cy advocates say its contents are vague and worry about Beijing authoritie­s having final interpreta­tion rights.

In a reflection of the widespread unease over the legislatio­n, major US internet companies including Facebook, Microsoft, Google, Twitter and Zoom have announced they have suspended the processing of requests for user data from the Hong Kong authoritie­s while they study it.

The US has begun removing Hong Kong’s special status in US law as Washington no longer deems the global financial hub sufficient­ly autonomous from mainland China. /Reuters

More on Hong Kong: page 10 and page 13

 ?? /AFP/Informatio­n Services Department ?? Gatekeeper: This handout photo from the Hong Kong government shows CEO Carrie Lam, speaking at a ceremony for the opening of the Office for Safeguardi­ng National Security of the Central People’s Government in Hong Kong on July 8.
/AFP/Informatio­n Services Department Gatekeeper: This handout photo from the Hong Kong government shows CEO Carrie Lam, speaking at a ceremony for the opening of the Office for Safeguardi­ng National Security of the Central People’s Government in Hong Kong on July 8.

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