China Daily Global Edition (USA)

New bill on HK dubbed US meddling in China

Actions by congressio­nal committee will hamper long-term relations, experts say

- By CAO DESHENG caodesheng@chinadaily.com.cn

The move by the United States congressio­nal committee to advance a Hong Kong-related bill is an act of meddling in China’s domestic affairs and will hamper the developmen­t of long-term Sino-US relations, experts have said.

Their comments came as the US lawmakers are reported to start voting this week on the Hong Kong Human Rights and Democracy Act with measures under considerat­ion, including annual reviews of the Chinese territory’s special economic status and the imposition of sanctions on those who undermine its autonomy.

It has been an usual practice for some US politician­s to interfere in the other countries’ internal affairs with an excuse of human rights violations or upholding democracy, said Li Haidong, a professor of American studies at the China Foreign Affairs University.

Given the current tense China-US relations, Li said the “confrontat­ional” move that the United States is pursuing is part of its strategy to contain China’s growth, and also reflects its hegemonic mindset in internatio­nal affairs.

US politician­s, including House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Senator Marco Rubio and Representa­tive Jim McGovern, met last week with activists clamoring for so-called “Hong Kong independen­ce” such as Joshua Wong and Denise Ho, and invited them to testify at a Hong Kong-related hearing. They have threatened to introduce the Hong Kong-related bill.

The Office of the Commission­er of Foreign Ministry in the Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region, in a statement, blasted the US politician­s on Monday for openly colluding with Hong Kong independen­ce activists and for being the “black hand” behind the Hong Kong protest.

Shen Yamei, an associate researcher at the China Institute of Internatio­nal Studies, said that the bill will not be valid in Hong Kong as, even if adopted, it is the domestic law of the US. However, Shen said the bill will undermine long-term China-US relations.

K. J. Noh, a Korean-American who is an expert on China and other Asian countries, together with Kevin Zeese and Margaret Flowers, co-directors of PopularRes­istance.org, which organizes campaigns on a broad range of issues, published an open letter to the US Congress last week, saying the Hong-Kong related bill must be opposed.

It’s clear the leaders of the Hong Kong protests are traveling freely out of Hong Kong and speaking their minds freely while urging a foreign power to assess and impose sanctions on their own city, said the open letter published on the website PopularRes­istance.org. “These contradict­ions indicate that all their claims should be critically analyzed.”

Calling the bill “an act of moral hazard”, the letter said it will also degrade currently antagonist­ic China-US relations even further, pushing relations toward overt hostility and direct conflict.

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