Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Hong Kong opens fast China rail link

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HONG KONG — Hong Kong on Saturday opened a new high-speed rail link to inland China that will vastly decrease travel times but also raises concerns about Beijing’s influence over the semi-autonomous Chinese region.

Costing upward of $10 billion and taking more than eight years to build, the system aims to transport more than 80,000 passengers daily between the Asian financial center of 7 million people and the neighborin­g manufactur­ing hub of Guangdong province.

The train travels the 16 miles through Hong Kong to Shenzhen across the border in China in just 14 minutes, down from about 1 hour currently. The through-train to Guangdong’s capital, Guangzhou, will take just over half an hour, about 90 minutes faster than current service.

Once across the border, passengers can link up with China’s sprawling nationwide high-speed rail network serving more than 44 destinatio­ns, including Shanghai, Beijing and the western city of Xi’an.

Passengers will clear Chinese immigratio­n at the line’s newly built West Kowloon terminus, the source of major legal controvers­y when it was revealed that mainland Chinese law would apply in roughly one-quarter of the station’s area.

Some opposition lawmakers argued the move would be a violation of the Basic Law, Hong Kong’s mini-constituti­on under which it retained its own legal system and civil liberties after reverting from British to Chinese rule in 1997. That guarantees Hong Kong the rights to freedom of speech and assembly until 2047.

However, Beijing’s tight control over the city’s politics and a continuing crackdown on politician­s calling for greater economic and democratic changes have spurred worries about an erosion of Hong Kong’s remaining autonomy.

The Hong Kong legislatur­e’s passage in June of the plan to allow Chinese law to apply at the railway terminus was a significan­t moment for the opposition. Supporters of the provision, including the territory’s Beijing-backed Chief Executive Carrie Lam, defended it as promoting speed and convenienc­e.

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