Antelope Valley Press

China sharply reduces elected seats in Hong Kong legislatur­e

-

HONG KONG — China has sharply reduced the number of directly elected seats in Hong Kong’s legislatur­e in a setback for the territory’s already beleaguere­d democracy movement.

The changes were announced Tuesday after a two-day meeting of China’s top legislatur­e.

The legislatur­e will be expanded to 90 seats, and only 20 will be elected by the public. Currently, half of the 70-seat legislatur­e — 35 seats — is directly elected.

The move is part of a two-phase effort to rein in political protest and opposition in Hong Kong, which is part of China but has had a more liberal political system as a former British colony. China imposed a national security law on Hong Kong last year and is following up this year with a revamp of the electoral process.

The crackdown comes in the wake of months of pro-democracy protests in 2019 that brought hundreds of thousands to the streets and turned violent as the government resisted the movement’s demands.

“It’s a very sad day for Hong Kong. The election system is completely dismantled,” said former lawmaker and Democratic Party member Emily Lau.

“They are going to get rid of opposition voices because under this new system, which is so oppressive and restrictiv­e, I don’t think any self-respecting individual will want to take part,” Lau said.

China’s top legislatur­e, the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress, amended Hong Kong’s constituti­on to pave the way for the changes. The Hong Kong government is now tasked with revising its electoral laws and holding an election.

In the current 70-member legislatur­e, voters elect half the members and the other half are chosen by constituen­cies representi­ng various profession­s and interest groups. Many of the constituen­cies lean pro-Beijing, ensuring that wing a majority in the legislatur­e.

The new body will have 20 elected members, 30 chosen by the constituen­cies and 40 by an Election Committee which also chooses the city’s leader.

The committee, which will be expanded from 1,200 to 1,500 members, is dominated by supporters of the central government in Beijing.

Election hopefuls will undergo vetting by the national security police and a committee that oversees national security in the city.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A man walks past a government advertisem­ent to promote the new Hong Kong electoral system reform, in Hong Kong, March 30.
ASSOCIATED PRESS A man walks past a government advertisem­ent to promote the new Hong Kong electoral system reform, in Hong Kong, March 30.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States