The Commercial Appeal

Ex-security chief to be Hong Kong’s next leader

China-installed official will take office in July

- Kin Cheung

HONG KONG – China is installing a career security official as the new leader of Hong Kong in the culminatio­n of a sweeping political transforma­tion that has gutted any opposition in the Asian financial center and placed it ever more firmly under Beijing’s control.

John Lee, formerly the city’s No. 2 official, is the only candidate Sunday in what is an election in name only. Well more than half of the 1,500-member Election Committee that selects the chief executive has already endorsed him and he needs only a simple majority to win.

Speaking to supporters Friday, Lee acknowledg­ed that Hong Kong has deep-rooted problems and reiterated his intention to bring a “results-oriented” approach.

“Hong Kong has to seize its opportunit­y, we cannot afford to wait, we cannot be late,” the 64-year-old former police officer said. “We will have to consolidat­e Hong Kong as an internatio­nal city, to develop Hong Kong’s potential as a free and open society, to connect the mainland of China and the world.”

Lee will replace Carrie Lam on July 1. Her 5-year term was marked by Hong Kong’s most tumultuous period since the former British colony was returned to China in 1997.

The election follows major changes to Hong Kong’s electoral laws last year to ensure that only “patriots” loyal to Beijing can hold office. That also saw the legislatur­e reorganize­d to all but

eliminate opposition voices.

The elaborate arrangemen­ts surroundin­g the predetermi­ned outcome speak to Beijing’s desire for a veneer of democracy. Though they will vote in a secret ballot, Hong Kong’s electors have all been carefully vetted.

“Even autocracie­s today feel obligated to go through the motions of staging an election in order to project greater legitimacy to their own population and to the internatio­nal community,” said Yvonne Chiu, a professor at the U.S. Naval War College who has written extensivel­y about Hong Kong politics.

Lam implemente­d Beijing’s orders and was widely seen as the face of the crackdown. But the career bureaucrat still seemed out of step with China’s hardline president and Communist Party leader Xi Jinping.

For her successor, Beijing opted for Lee, a former top police official and staunch advocate of the new National Security Law that outlaws subversion, secession, terrorism and collusion with foreign forces. More than 150 activists and others have been arrested since its implementa­tion.

Following passage of the law in 2020, the United States sanctioned Lee, Lam and other Hong Kong and mainland Chinese government officials, for “underminin­g Hong Kong’s autonomy and restrictin­g the freedom of expression or assembly.”

Almost all government critics have been jailed, fled abroad or been intimidate­d into silence. Thousands of residents have voted with their feet, with many profession­als and others leaving the city of 7.4 million people.

 ?? KIN CHEUNG/AP ?? China is moving to install John Lee as the new leader of Hong Kong in the culminatio­n of a sweeping political transforma­tion that has gutted the Asian financial center’s democratic institutio­ns and placed it ever more firmly under Beijing’s control.
KIN CHEUNG/AP China is moving to install John Lee as the new leader of Hong Kong in the culminatio­n of a sweeping political transforma­tion that has gutted the Asian financial center’s democratic institutio­ns and placed it ever more firmly under Beijing’s control.

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