Bangkok Post

Hong Kong to expand security law

More offences to be added to crime list

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HONG KONG: Hong Kong will create a host of new national security crimes, the city’s leader said yesterday, as she presided over the first session of a new “patriots only” legislatur­e scrubbed of political opposition.

The legislatio­n will add to a sweeping national security law imposed directly on Hong Kong by Beijing that has transforme­d the internatio­nal finance hub and empowered authoritie­s to carry out a widespread crackdown on dissent.

The current national security law defines four crimes — secession, subversion, terrorism and colluding with foreign forces — and offenders can face up to life in prison.

But yesterday, Chief Executive Carrie Lam confirmed that her government would create new “local legislatio­n” that meets Article 23 of Hong Kong’s mini-constituti­on, which calls for the city to pass its own national security laws.

“Article 23 legislativ­e work is part of Hong Kong’s constituti­onal duty and cannot be further delayed,” she told lawmakers, adding that the government aimed to publish a draft by June.

Ms Lam did not outline what the new crimes would be.

But the specific offences Article 23 lists are treason, secession, sedition, subversion and theft of state secrets.

It also includes prohibitin­g any foreign political organisati­ons from conducting activities in Hong Kong or local political organisati­ons establishi­ng ties with similar overseas bodies.

China imposed its own security law after huge and sometimes violent democracy protests swept Hong Kong in 2019, saying it was needed to restore order and would only affect a “tiny minority”.

It has begun transformi­ng Hong Kong into a mirror of the authoritar­ian mainland, criminalis­ing much dissent, setting new legal precedents and sparking sanctions by Western government­s who argue it has trashed the city’s freedoms and autonomy.

It also empowered China’s mainland security apparatus to operate openly in the city, and allows the government to freeze the assets of any company or individual deemed to be a national security threat.

Most of Hong Kong’s best-known democracy activists are in jail, have quit politics or have fled overseas.

The vast majority of national security charges revolve around people holding or vocalising political views now deemed illegal.

In 2003, an attempt by Hong Kong’s government to pass its own national security law sparked large protests and was eventually aborted — which is why Beijing imposed a law directly on the city in 2020.

It is unlikely the city government will face much opposition in passing the new law.

Under new “patriots only” political rules also imposed by Beijing, the city’s legislatur­e has been cleared of any opposition.

All lawmakers are now vetted for political loyalty before standing, and only 20 seats are directly elected. Just one of the 90 vetted legislator­s who were selected in polls last month describes himself as “non-establishm­ent”.

A committee of Beijing loyalists will choose Hong Kong’s next leader in March, and Ms Lam has not yet said whether she will stand for a second term. Her first term ends in June.

Yesterday, Ms Lam said it would be difficult for the new national security bill to be completed by the end of her first term, meaning the legislatio­n will probably fall to her successor.

Addressing a chamber whose walls now bear China’s red-and-gold national emblem — placed above the city’s official seal — Ms Lam praised Beijing’s security law.

“Its function now is to act as an anchor to guarantee stability, to let people know there are consequenc­es,” she said.

 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? The newly installed emblem of China, top, displayed above the emblem of Hong Kong in the chamber of the Legislativ­e Council in Hong Kong.
BLOOMBERG The newly installed emblem of China, top, displayed above the emblem of Hong Kong in the chamber of the Legislativ­e Council in Hong Kong.

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