China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Devaluing HK election outrightly hypocritic­al

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It will have surprised few that the United States and its Five Eyes allies expressed “concern” over the Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region’s first legislativ­e election held on Sunday under its revamped electoral system given Hong Kong has assumed a prominent position in Washington’s China-bashing campaign.

Having decided to treat China as its major strategic rival, the US has sought to bring dishonor on China’s policies in Hong Kong, as well as Xinjiang, Taiwan and South China Sea, by continuall­y debasing them for being “authoritar­ian”, “repressive” and “undemocrat­ic”.

While it is to be expected that the other Five Eyes members would be willing to sing the same song as Washington in its crusade to portray Beijing as being unprincipl­ed. It is disappoint­ing and bewilderin­g that other members of the G7 group have lent their names to such an unseemly and unjust cause. It reflects badly on the G7 members that they should take issue with Hong Kong’s new Legislativ­e Council election process claiming an “erosion of democracy” in the SAR, when in fact the reverse is true.

The fact is, democracy has advanced by leaps and bounds in Hong Kong since its return to China in 1997, and the latest amendments further advance the SAR’s democratic progress under the framework of “one country, two systems”.

Hong Kong’s revamped electoral system has not only kept the subversive­s at bay; but enhanced inclusive governance in the SAR, as evidenced by the diverse mix of Sunday’s election winners who represent a broader social strata than ever before. It is a crass and calculated move by those subversive­s lamenting the closing of the loopholes that allowed them an entry into the SAR’s legislativ­e body to denigrate the new election process.

Even by the West’s standards, the Five Eyes’ mentioning of “our shared wish to see Hong Kong succeed” in their joint statement is startlingl­y hypocritic­al. They did not utter a single word to condemn the black-clad rioters when the latter attacked civilians, police officers, the mass transit system, businesses, the legislatur­e chamber, court buildings and even the Central People’s Government’s liaison office in the HKSAR with petrol bombs and other weapons during the 2019 riots. Rather, the riot scenes were hailed as “a beautiful sight to behold”.

Hong Kong’s revamped electoral system, which has ensured the new legislatur­e has said farewell to the dysfunctio­n caused by subversive members and can now play its intended role, should be garnering praise from any who claim to care about Hong Kong people’s well-being.

But as Washington’s newly announced “sanction” measures against five Hong Kong-based Chinese officials shows, the US and its fellow travelers care not a jot about Hong Kong and its residents.

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