Bangkok Post

Beijing threatens HK protesters

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BEIJING: China’s Hong Kong affairs office warned yesterday that the city will never be calm unless “black-clad violent protesters” were all removed, describing them as a “political virus” that seeks independen­ce from the central government in Beijing.

The strongly worded statement comes amid mounting concerns among democracy activists that China is tightening its grip over the former British colony, while a lockdown to prevent coronaviru­s infections has largely kept their movement off the streets.

The Hong Kong and Macau Affairs office warned that China’s central government will not sit idly by “with this recklessly demented force in place” and that China’s central government has the greatest responsibi­lity in maintainin­g order and safeguardi­ng national security.

“The scorched-earth action of the black-clad violent protesters is a political virus in Hong Kong society and a big enemy to ‘one-country-two-systems’,” the office said in a statement yesterday.

“As long as the protesters are not removed, Hong Kong will never be calm.”

The Asian financial hub was rocked in 2019 by months of massive, and sometimes violent, political protests over a now-withdrawn extraditio­n bill that would have allowed people to be sent to mainland China for trial.

Many young protesters dressed in black fought running battles with Hong Kong police as the demonstrat­ions evolved into calls for greater democracy.

Protesters said Beijing was seeking to erode the “one country, two systems” style of governance that guarantees broad freedoms for Hong Kong since its return to Chinese rule in 1997.

Beijing rejects criticism that it is seeking to encroach on the city’s muchcheris­hed freedoms.

Hong Kong riot police dispersed a crowd of 300 pro-democracy activists, some wearing black, late last month — the first sizeable protest since the government imposed a ban on public meetings at the end of March to curb coronaviru­s infections.

The arrests of 15 activists in April, including veteran politician­s, a publishing tycoon and senior barristers, thrust the protest movement back into the spotlight and drew condemnati­on from Washington and internatio­nal rights groups.

Beijing’s top representa­tive office in Hong Kong on Saturday condemned what it described as extreme radicals for holding illegal assemblies over the Labour Day holiday and accused them of underminin­g the rule of law.

A war of words has intensifie­d in the past few weeks, with Beijing’s top official in Hong Kong urging the local government to work to enact national security legislatio­n “as soon as possible”, fuelling worries over what many see as encroachme­nt on the territory’s freedoms.

“Hong Kong’s biggest trouble comes from within, that is the violent forces openly calling for and engaging in lanchao,” said the office, referring to a scorched-earth tactic.

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