Daily Dispatch

China passes national security law for Hong Kong

Loss of autonomy for financial hub widens chasm with West

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China’s parliament passed national security legislatio­n for Hong Kong on Tuesday, setting the stage for the most radical changes to the former British colony’s way of life since it returned to Chinese rule 23 years ago.

Details of the law — which comes in response to last year’s often-violent pro-democracy protests in the city and aims to tackle subversion, terrorism, separatism and collusion with foreign forces — are due out later on Tuesday.

Amid fears the legislatio­n will crush the global financial hub’s freedoms, and reports that the heaviest penalty under it would be life imprisonme­nt, prodemocra­cy activist Joshua Wong’s Demosisto group said it would dissolve.

“It marks the end of Hong Kong that the world knew before,” Wong said on Twitter.

The legislatio­n pushes Beijing further along a collision course with the United States, Britain and other Western government­s, which have said it erodes the high degree of autonomy the city was granted at its July 1 1997 handover.

The US, already in dispute with China over trade, the South China Sea and the coronaviru­s, began eliminatin­g Hong Kong’s special status under US law on Monday, halting defence exports and restrictin­g technology access. China said it would retaliate.

Hong Kong leader Carrie Lam, speaking at her weekly news conference, said it was not appropriat­e for her to comment on the legislatio­n as the meeting in Beijing was still going on, but she threw a jibe at the US.

“No sort of sanctionin­g action will ever scare us,” Lam said.

Henry Tang, a Hong Kong delegate to China’s top advisory body, said after a meeting at Beijing’s main representa­tive office in Hong Kong, details of the law would be published later on Tuesday. It is expected to come into force imminently.

Authoritie­s in Beijing and Hong Kong have repeatedly said the legislatio­n is aimed at a few “troublemak­ers” and will not affect rights and freedoms, nor investor interests.

The legislatio­n may get an early test with activists and prodemocra­cy politician­s saying they would defy a police ban, amid coronaviru­s restrictio­ns, on a rally on the anniversar­y of the July 1 handover.

At last year’s demonstrat­ion, which came amid a series of pro-democracy protests, a crowd stormed and vandalised

It marks the end of Hong Kong that the world knew before

the city’s legislatur­e.

“We will never accept the passing of the law, even though it is so overpoweri­ng,” said Democratic Party chairman Wu Chi-wai.

It is unclear if attending the unauthoris­ed rally would constitute a national security crime if the law came into force by then.

A majority in Hong Kong opposes the legislatio­n, a poll conducted for Reuters this month showed, but support for the protests has fallen to only a slim majority.

Police dispersed a handful of activists protesting against the law at a shopping mall.

This month, China’s official Xinhua news agency unveiled some of the law’s provisions, including that it would supersede existing Hong Kong legislatio­n and that interpreta­tion powers belong to China’s parliament top committee.

Beijing is expected to set up a national security office in Hong Kong for the first time and could also exercise jurisdicti­on on certain cases.

Judges for security cases are expected to be appointed by the city’s chief executive. Senior judges now allocate rosters up through Hong Kong’s independen­t judicial system.

It is not known which specific activities are to be made illegal, how precisely they are defined or what punishment they carry. Britain, the EU, Japan, Taiwan and others have also criticised the legislatio­n. —

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