Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Divided West appears helpless as China clamps down on Hong Kong

- By Sylvia Hui The Washington Post contribute­d.

LONDON — From Tokyo to Brussels, political leaders have swiftly decried Beijing’s move to impose a tough national security law on Hong Kong that cracks down on subversive activity and protest in the semi-autonomous territory.

But the rhetoric has more bark than bite. For people in Hong Kong, the question is: Will internatio­nal anger and statements of concern make any difference?

Individual countries have little leverage over Beijing on human rights, experts say. A joint effort could make a difference, but coordinate­d action seems unlikely given strained ties between the Trump administra­tion and many of Washington’s traditiona­l European allies.

“The USA and EU are moving in different directions in many areas. It is perhaps to China’s advantage that that should be so,” said Rod Wye, an Asia-Pacific associate fellow at the Chatham House think tank in London. In particular, Europeans do not want to be drawn into the U.S.-China trade war, he said.

“Expression­s of concern are certainly not going to change the Chinese intention one little bit,” he added.

A joint U.S.-European report released last week on relations with China described “a deep sense of frustratio­n, fatigue, and futility. The stronger China gets, the less willing it has become to even engage perfunctor­ily with the West on the issue.”

The report — from the Asia Society, the Bertelsman­n Stiftung and George Washington University — said that concern about human rights abuses in China remains deep, from the new security law in Hong Kong, which went into effect Tuesday night, to the repression of Muslim minorities in the Xinjiang region in western China.

China routinely dismisses all such criticism as interferen­ce in its domestic affairs. One of the crimes in the Hong Kong security law explicitly outlaws receiving funding or support from overseas to disrupt lawmaking in Hong Kong or impose sanctions on the city.

“This issue is purely China’s internal affairs, and no foreign country has the right to interfere,” Chinese Foreign Ministry spokespers­on Zhao Lijian said.

Many fear the law will be used to curb opposition voices and see it as Beijing’s boldest move yet to erase the legal firewall between the mainland’s Communist Party system and Hong Kong, which was promised a high degree of autonomy and civil liberties under a “one country, two systems” principle.

Britain called the law “deeply troubling” and said it “lies in direct conflict with China’s internatio­nal obligation­s.” The U.S. warned that China’s repeated violations of its internatio­nal commitment­s “is a pattern the world cannot ignore.” And the European Union warned that China risked “very negative consequenc­es” to its reputation and to business confidence in the global financial hub.

Steve Tsang, who directs the China Institute at London’s School of Oriental and African Studies, said that if the EU were to join forces on the issue with the “Five Eyes” alliance — the U.S., Britain, Canada, Australia and New Zealand — the group would have real economic clout. The EU is China’s largest trading partner.

But he said it was “farfetched” for either British Prime Minister Boris Johnson or U.S. President Donald Trump to work with the EU on the issue.

“It is reasonable for Beijing to calculate that both the U.K. and U.S. are paper tigers,” Mr. Tsang said. “Boris is focused on Brexit. He is happy to cooperate with anyone except for the EU.”

Chinese experts said the West isn’t able to sway China because of fundamenta­l difference­s in their views. The West stresses political rights, while China emphasizes economic rights, said Yu Wanli, an internatio­nal relations professor at Beijing Language and Culture University.

“It is not that China is trying to withstand pressure from the West, but it is that China’s own policies have achieved results,” Mr. Yu said. “China doesn’t need to care about pressure from the West.”

Stressing a legal and moral duty to its former colony, Britain on Wednesday announced it is extending residency rights for up to 3 million Hong Kongers eligible for British National Overseas passports, allowing them to live and work in the U.K. for five years. In Brussels, the European Parliament last month passed a resolution calling on the EU to consider taking Beijing to the Internatio­nal Court of Justice.

Reinhard Buẗ ikofer, chair of the European Parliament’s delegation for China relations, said lawmakers are considerin­g other measures, such as a ban on exports of “technology utilized to oppress Hong Kong citizens.” Other options include a “lifeboat” offer for Hong Kong democracy activists, and pushing for the United Nations to appoint a special envoy to the city.

“The major burden is on the incoming German presidency to rally member states in following through in what they have indicated in the past, that this would not remain without consequenc­es,” Mr. Buẗ ikofer said.

In the U.S., the Trump administra­tion has said it will bar defense exports to Hong Kong, cancel policy exemptions that give Hong Kong special treatment, and impose visa restrictio­ns on Chinese Communist Party officials “responsibl­e for underminin­g Hong Kong’s autonomy.”

The U.S. Senate passed a bill Thursday to impose sanctions on China over its ongoing crackdown on Hong Kong.

Senators approved the bill without objection after similar action Wednesday in the House — a sign of how widespread bipartisan anger is in

Washington over China’s hostile takeover of Hong Kong’s judicial system.

“It’s not only an effort to shield freedom-loving Hong Kongers from this continuing escalation of aggression,” Sen. Patrick Toomey, R-Pa., who wrote the legislatio­n with Sen. Chris Van Hollen, D-Md., said on the Senate floor Thursday. “The bill is a larger signal to China . . . . It’s a message that our patience has run out.”

The legislatio­n that now heads to President Donald Trump’s desk mandates travel bans and asset freezes for individual­s who work to facilitate implementa­tion of China’s new national security law for Hong Kong, as well as stiff penalties against financial institutio­ns that do “significan­t” business with sanctioned people and entities.

Mr. Toomey and Mr. Van Hollen also acknowledg­ed that the legislatio­n is unlikely to force China to repeal the national security law at the center of Washington’s objections. But they indicated that the threat of penalties could affect how China chooses to implement it.

“The danger with this [Chinese] law is that it’s very broadly written,” Mr. Van Hollen said. “They have a lot of discretion in how they move forward.”

On Wednesday, the first day the new law’s implementa­tion, Hong Kong police arrested 370 people, including several protesters demonstrat­ing against the clampdown. Under the new standard, Hong Kongers who are deemed guilty of “subversion” face a possible life sentence in prison - the same as political dissidents in mainland China.

 ?? Kin Cheun/Associated Pressg ?? Pro-China supporters hold Chinese and Hong Kong national flags during a rally to celebrate the approval of a national security law for Hong Kong, in Hong Kong June 30.
Kin Cheun/Associated Pressg Pro-China supporters hold Chinese and Hong Kong national flags during a rally to celebrate the approval of a national security law for Hong Kong, in Hong Kong June 30.

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