The Scotsman

Law to quash dissent in Hong Kong is passed

- Kanis Leung scotsman.com

Hong Kong politician­s have passed a national security law that grants the government more power to quash dissent.

The legislatur­e confirmed the Safeguardi­ng National Security Law during a special session yesterday.

It comes on top of a similar law imposed by Beijing four years ago, which has largely silenced opposition voices in the financial hub.

Hong k on g’ s legislativ­e council,which is packed with beijing loyalists following an electoral overhaul, exp edited the process.

Since the Bill was unveiled on March 8, a committee held daily meetings for a week following an appeal by Hong Kong leader John Lee to push the law through “at full speed”.

The law threatens stringent penalties for a wide range of actions which authoritie­s call threats to national security, with the most severe — including treason and insurrecti­on — punishable by life imprisonme­nt.

Lesser offences, including the possession of seditious publicatio­ns,could lead to several years in jail. Some provisions allow criminal prosecutio­ns for acts committed anywhere in the world.

After the vote, Mr Lee announced the law will take effect on Saturday.

Critics said the new law will further erode civil liberties that Beijing promised top reserve for 50 years when the former British colony returned to Chinese rule in 1997.

Hong Kong’s political scene has changed dramatical­ly since the massive 2019 street protests that challenged china’ s rule over the semi-autonomous territory. Many leading activists have been prosecuted while others sought refuge abroad. Influentia­l pro-democracy media such as Apple Daily and Stand News have closed.

The crackdown prompted an exodus of disillusio­ned young profession­als and middle-class families to the US, Britain, Canada and Taiwan.

Hong Kong’s mini-constituti­on, the Basic Law, requires the city to enact a home-grown national security law.

A previous attempt in 2003 sparked a street protest that drew half a million people and forced the legislatio­n to be shelved.

Officials insist the new security law balances security with safeguardi­ng rights and freedoms. The city government said it is needed to prevent a recurrence of the protests and that it will only affect “an extremely small minority” of disloyal residents.

The measure targets espionage, disclosing state secrets, and “colluding with external forces” to commit illegal acts, among others.

Its provisions include tougher penalties for people convicted of endangerin­g national security by certain acts if they are also found to be working with foreign government­s or organisati­ons to do so.

Those who damage public infrastruc­ture with the intent to endanger national security could be jailed for 20 years or, if they colluded with external forces, for life.

In 2019, protesters occupied Hong Kong’s airport and vandalised railway stations.

Business people and journalist­s have expressed fears that a broad law against disclosure of state secrets and foreign interferen­ce will affect their day-today work.

 ?? ?? Police officers stand guard outside the Legislativ­e Council in Hong Kong yesterday as the proposed national security law granting the government more power to quash dissent was passed
Police officers stand guard outside the Legislativ­e Council in Hong Kong yesterday as the proposed national security law granting the government more power to quash dissent was passed

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