Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.S. bill angers China

- COMPILED BY DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE STAFF FROM WIRE REPORTS

HONG KONG — Chinese authoritie­s reacted angrily to the U.S. House of Representa­tives’ passage of a bill that paves the way for economic sanctions against individual­s who undermine Hong Kong’s autonomy, as the city braced for fresh unrest and some lawmakers disrupted a much-anticipate­d policy speech by its embattled leader.

The Hong Kong Human Rights and Democracy Act, approved unanimousl­y by the House on Tuesday, requires the U.S. government to consider annually whether it should continue to treat Hong Kong as a separate trading entity from mainland China in response to political developmen­ts in the city. That special status has allowed Hong Kong to cement its role as an internatio­nal financial center and exempts its goods and services from the U.S. tariffs.

China promised Hong Kong a high degree of autonomy until 2047 — a half-century after its handover from British rule, under a “one country, two systems” principle — but Beijing has been tightening its grip. Activists say the ruling Communist Party has gradually chipped away at the rights enjoyed by the people of Hong Kong that do not exist in mainland China, such as an independen­t judiciary and freedom of assembly.

After months of clashes between pro-democracy protesters and riot police in Hong Kong sparked by now-shelved plans to allow extraditio­ns to the mainland, the city’s government invoked emergency powers this month to ban masks at protests, expanding a crackdown on demonstrat­ors. The intensifyi­ng crackdown prompted U.S. lawmakers to propose the bill, which must get a green light from the Senate and White House before it becomes law.

“The extraordin­ary outpouring of courage from the people of Hong Kong stands in stark contrast to a cowardly government that refuses to respect the rule of law or live up to the ‘one country, two systems’ framework, which was guaranteed more than two decades ago,” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said Tuesday.

Republican senators said Wednesday that they want to move quickly on the legislatio­n.

“Hong Kong is a high priority for me,” GOP Sen. Jim Risch of Idaho, chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee, said. “We’re going to move on it as rapidly as we can.”

No date has been set yet for a vote on the Senate version of the House measure.

“I think we’re going to get it up on the floor here fairly soon,” Republican Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida, a China critic, told reporters.

On Wednesday, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Geng Shuang voiced Beijing’s “strong indignatio­n and firm opposition” to the bill and said China would take strong measures to safeguard its interests.

He said the bill demonstrat­ed a “naked double standard, which fully exposes the extreme hypocrisy of some people in the U.S. on the issues of human-rights and democracy and their sinister intentions to undermine Hong Kong’s prosperity and stability and contain China’s developmen­t.”

Yang Guang, spokesman for China’s Hong Kong and Macao Affairs Office, which oversees Hong Kong affairs, said the bill “openly supports the opposition and radical forces in Hong Kong.”

For Hong Kong, the bill could lead to severe economic consequenc­es. An end to the city’s special trading relationsh­ip with the United States would erode the territory’s advantages as a Western-friendly business hub and a regional base for numerous multinatio­nal firms.

Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by David Crawshaw, Shibani Mahtani and Anna Fifield of The Washington Post; by Daniel Flatley, Dandan Li, Iain Marlow, Li Liu, Sofia Horta e Costa, Christophe­r Anstey, Shelly Banjo and Eric Lam of Bloomberg News; and by John Leicester of The Associated Press.

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