Texarkana Gazette

China to establish national security bureau in Hong Kong

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— despite heavy criticism from within Hong Kong and abroad.

The details of the proposed national security law emerged as the body that handles most lawmaking for China’s legislatur­e closed its latest meeting. The bill was raised for discussion at the meeting of the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress but there was no further word on its fate, Xinhua said.

Tam Yiu-chung, Hong Kong’s sole delegate on the Standing Committee, told Hong Kong public broadcaste­r RTHK that the law was reviewed but no vote had been taken, and that it wasn’t clear when it would be further vetted. The Standing Committee meets every two months.

The bill was submitted Thursday for deliberati­on, covering four categories of crimes: secession, subversion of state power, local terrorist activities and collaborat­ing

BEIJING — China plans to establish a special bureau in Hong Kong to investigat­e and prosecute crimes considered threatenin­g to national security, according to details of a controvers­ial new national security law Beijing is imposing on the semi-autonomous territory.

In addition, bodies in all Hong Kong government department­s, from finance to immigratio­n, will be directly answerable to the central government in Beijing, the official Xinhua News Agency said Saturday.

The announceme­nt increases concerns that China’s communist government will continue to tighten its grip on Hong Kong. Beijing has said it is determined to press ahead with the national security legislatio­n — which has been strongly criticized as underminin­g the Asian financial hub’s legal and political institutio­ns with foreign or external foreign forces to endanger national security.

The bill has received heavy criticism, including from the U.S., which says it will revoke some of the preferenti­al conditions extended toward Hong Kong after its transfer from British to Chinese rule in 1997.

Britain has said it will offer passports and a path to citizenshi­p to as many as 3 million Hong Kong residents. Group of Seven leading economies called on China to reconsider its plans, issuing a joint statement voicing “grave concern” over the legislatio­n that is said would breach Beijing’s internatio­nal commitment­s as well as the territory’s constituti­on.

Beijing has repeatedly denounced the moves as rank interferen­ce in its internal affairs.

Li Zhanshu, the ruling Communist Party’s third-ranking official and head of the National People’s Congress, presided over the meeting of the Standing Committee, which handles most legislativ­e tasks in between the annual sessions of the full and largely ceremonial congress.

In its full session last month, the congress ratified a decision to enact such legislatio­n at the national level after Hong Kong’s own Legislativ­e Council was unable to do so because of strong local opposition. Critics say the law could severely limit free speech and opposition political activity.

Legal experts say Beijing’s justificat­ions for the law are debatable.

The Hong Kong Bar Associatio­n on Friday called on the city’s government to reveal details of the bill and warned that the law’s enforcemen­t in Hong Kong risked setting up a system of conflictin­g parallel legal standards dominated by Beijing.

“It raises the question whether individual­s will be tried within the criminal justice system in (Hong Kong) by the Hong Kong courts or sent to the Mainland for trial and serve any terms of imprisonme­nt in Mainland prisons,” the bar associatio­n said in a statement.

China acted following widespread and sometimes violent anti-government protests in Hong Kong last year that Beijing saw as a dangerous campaign to split the territory from the rest of the country. Tho protests were initially spurred by opposition to proposed legislatio­n that could have seen criminal suspects sent to the mainland for trials in China’s highly opaque legal system, along with possible torture and abuse. The extraditio­n bill was eventually scrapped.

China has sought to assuage concerns by saying the new legislatio­n would only target “acts and activities that severely undermine national security,” according to Xinhua.

The legislatio­n is broadly seen as an additional measure further eroding the legal distinctio­ns between Hong Kong and mainland China.

Earlier this month, Hong Kong’s legislatur­e approved a contentiou­s bill making it illegal to insult the Chinese national anthem after pro-democracy lawmakers boycotted the vote out of protest.

Senior opposition figures have also been arrested for taking part in demonstrat­ions, and questions have arisen over whether the national security legislatio­n will be used to disqualify pro-democracy candidates in September’s elections for the Beijing-controlled Legislativ­e Council.

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