China Daily Global Edition (USA)

HK foreign press club blasted

Hosting of ‘independen­ce’ speech unlawful, harms national security

- By KATHY ZHANG, WILLA WU and KATE LI in Hong Kong Contact the writers at kathyzhang@ chinadaily­hk.com

The Foreign Ministry’s top representa­tive in Hong Kong urged the city’s Foreign Correspond­ents’ Club on Tuesday to stop harming national security under the guise of freedom of the press and speech.

The censure came in a statement issued by the Commission­er’s Office of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in the Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region after local pro-independen­ce activist Andy Chan Ho-tin delivered a speech at the FCC in Central.

The country’s Constituti­on and Hong Kong’s Basic Law guarantee freedom of speech, the office stressed. After 70 years in Hong Kong, the FCC must acknowledg­e that Hong Kong’s freedom of the press is fully protected.

However, freedom entails certain limits and bottom lines, it added.

The advocacy of “Hong Kong independen­ce” does not fall into the domain of freedom of speech as it violates the Constituti­on, the Basic Law and relevant law in the city, the office stressed.

Article 19 of the United Nations’ Internatio­nal Covenant on Civil and Political Rights stipulates that everyone has the right to freedom of expression, but that right may be subject to certain restrictio­ns provided by law and when necessary for the protection of national security or of public order, the office cited.

The office said all countries have their own limits on freedom of speech despite different social realities and legal systems. It is unacceptab­le to invite war criminals from World War II to deliver a public speech in France, the office said, and Germany would never allow any party to give believers in Nazism the floor.

Moreover, no country would allow foreign organizati­ons to invite separatist­s to spread notions of independen­ce and violence.

By providing a platform for an independen­ce advocate, the FCC intruded on Hong Kong’s rule of law and abused freedom of the press, the office said.

The central government, Hong Kong SAR government and all Chinese people will not allow “Hong Kong independen­ce” advocates and the FCC to cross a red line and the bottom line of sovereignt­y and national security, it stressed.

Also on Tuesday, Acting Chief Executive of the HKSAR Matthew Cheung Kin-chung said the Hong Kong government “deeply regrets” and is “highly concerned” about the pro-independen­ce talk.

Calling the FCC’s move “unacceptab­le” and “inappropri­ate”, Cheung stressed that the SAR government would not tolerate any “Hong Kong independen­ce” advocacy, as it is a blatant violation of the Basic Law and a direct affront to national security, sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity.

There is no room for discussing such advocacy, nor any compromise­s in safeguardi­ng national security, sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity, Cheung added.

Some 32 lawmakers issued a joint statement urging the Hong Kong government to take concrete measures to prevent local organizati­ons from providing venues for separatist­s.

Several local groups gathered outside FCC in Central to protest Chan’s speech and the FCC’s role in the talk. Protesters condemned the advocacy of “Hong Kong independen­ce”. They also called for local legislatio­n on the national security law.

Chan is founder of the Hong Kong National Party, the only political party in the city that explicitly advocates “Hong Kong independen­ce” and advertises it on its website. The party is now facing a proposed government ban on operations for its possible breach of the Societies Ordinance.

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