El Dorado News-Times

Hong Kong legislator out; loyalty cited

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HONG KONG — Hong Kong authoritie­s ousted an opposition legislator from his seat Thursday after finding him to be insufficie­ntly loyal amid Beijing’s tightening grip on the semi-autonomous city.

Cheng Chung-tai of the populist Civic Party was disqualifi­ed from the Legislatur­e after he “failed to fulfil the legal requiremen­ts and conditions on upholding the Basic Law and bearing allegiance” to Hong Kong, the government said in a statement. The Basic Law is Hong Kong’s mini-constituti­on.

He was one of two remaining opposition lawmakers in the Legislatur­e, after the pro-democracy camp of legislator­s resigned en masse last year after the disqualifi­cation of four of their colleagues.

Hong Kong’s chief secretary, John Lee, said in a news conference that Cheng was disqualifi­ed after an opinion was sought from the territory’s national security committee, which said Cheng had failed to comply with the requiremen­ts of being a legislator. The committee was set up last year when Beijing imposed a strict national security law that effectivel­y criminaliz­ed opposition to the government and silenced dissent.

The committee referred to negative behavior from Cheng in seeking public office, Lee said, without describing any specific incidents that led to his disqualifi­cation.

Cheng, considered an independen­t opposition lawmaker, opposed a number of bills favored by the pro-Beijing camp, including electoral reform legislatio­n earlier this year that reduced the proportion of directly elected lawmakers.

Cheng said he was not aware of any legal recourse he could seek regarding his disqualifi­cation.

 ?? (AP/Vincent Yu) ?? Lawmaker Cheng Chung-tai displays a document Thursday after he was ousted from the Legislatur­e in Hong Kong.
(AP/Vincent Yu) Lawmaker Cheng Chung-tai displays a document Thursday after he was ousted from the Legislatur­e in Hong Kong.

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