Bangkok Post

HK dismisses US criticism of rights

Govt says freedom of speech ‘not absolute’

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HONG KONG: Hong Kong yesterday dismissed US criticism of its human rights practices, saying the Asian financial hub was “firmly committed” to upholding and safeguardi­ng freedoms.

The former British colony was rocked by months of sometimes violent protests from last June, sparked by a now-suspended bill that would have allowed extraditio­ns to mainland China.

The US State Department said in a report on Wednesday that significan­t human rights issues in the Chineserul­ed city included police brutality against protesters, interferen­ce with the right of peaceful assembly and restrictio­ns on political participat­ion.

Hong Kong’s government said the police were duty bound to take appropriat­e action, including the use of necessary force, in the face of violence that endangered public order.

“The degree and extent of violence committed by radical protesters was unpreceden­ted in Hong Kong, and it has seriously endangered people’s personal safety, public order and security,” the city’s government said.

Safeguardi­ng human rights and freedoms was a constituti­onal duty, it added. “The government attaches the utmost importance to and is firmly committed to upholding human rights and various freedoms in Hong Kong.”

The US State Department, in its Country Reports on Human Rights Practices, noted examples of police brutality against protesters including on Aug 31 when police “rushed onto a subway train and beat several individual­s while making arrests”.

On press freedom, the State Department cited many journalist­s as saying they were harassed, detained or assaulted while covering the protests, while the house of democracy activist Jimmy Lai, who is also an outspoken critic of Beijing and owner of the Apple Daily newspaper, was attacked.

The State Department also referred to vandalism on the part of protesters, including damage to the office of

China’s official news agency, Xinhua, in November.

The city government said freedom of speech and freedom of peaceful assembly were “not absolute”.

“The Internatio­nal Covenant on Civil and Political Rights provides that restrictio­ns might be imposed by law if this is necessary to protect, amongst others, national security, public safety, public order or the rights and freedoms of others,” it said.

The unrest in Hong Kong developed into calls for greater democracy, fuelled by worries about the erosion of rights guaranteed under a “one country, two systems” formula imposed when the city returned to Chinese rule in 1997.

The city government said universal suffrage was an ultimate aim but it needed dialogue in an atmosphere of peace and mutual trust leading to consensus. “Any allegation­s of political censorship, restrictio­n of the freedom of speech or deprivatio­n of the right to stand for elections are totally unfounded,” it said.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Riot police tackle an anti-government protester during a rally at Mong Kok in Hong Kong.
REUTERS Riot police tackle an anti-government protester during a rally at Mong Kok in Hong Kong.

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