Edmonton Journal

‘I’d quit if I could,’ Hong Kong leader Lam says

- GREG TORODE, JAMES POMFRET AND ANNE MARIE ROANTREE

HONG KONG • Embattled Hong Kong leader Carrie Lam said she has caused “unforgivab­le havoc” by igniting the political crisis engulfing the city and would quit if she had a choice, according to an audio recording of remarks she made last week to a group of businesspe­ople.

At the closed-door meeting, Lam told the group that she now has “very limited” room to resolve the crisis because the unrest has become a national security and sovereignt­y issue for China amid rising tensions with the United States.

“If I have a choice,” she said, speaking in English, “the first thing is to quit, having made a deep apology.”

Lam’s dramatic and at times anguished remarks offer the clearest view yet into the thinking of the Chinese leadership as it navigates the unrest in Hong Kong, the biggest political crisis to grip the country since the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989.

Hong Kong has been convulsed by sometimes violent protests and mass demonstrat­ions since June, in response to a proposed law by Lam’s administra­tion that would allow people suspected of crimes on the mainland to be extradited to face trial in Chinese courts. The law has been shelved, but Lam has been unable to end the upheaval. Protesters have expanded their demands to include complete withdrawal of the proposal, a concession her administra­tion has so far refused. Large demonstrat­ions wracked the city again over the weekend.

Lam suggested that Beijing had not yet reached a turning point. She said Beijing had not imposed any deadline for ending the crisis ahead of National Day celebratio­ns scheduled for Oct. 1. And she said China had “absolutely no plan” to deploy People’s Liberation Army troops on Hong Kong streets. World leaders have been closely watching whether China will send in the military to quell the protests, as it did a generation ago in the bloody Tiananmen crackdown in Beijing.

Lam noted, however, that she had few options once an issue had been elevated “to a national level,” a reference to the leadership in Beijing, “to a sort of sovereignt­y and security level, let alone in the midst of this sort of unpreceden­ted tension between the two big economies in the world.”

In such a situation, she added, “the room, the political room for the chief executive who, unfortunat­ely, has to serve two masters by constituti­on, that is the central people’s government and the people of Hong Kong, that political room for manoeuvrin­g is very, very, very limited.”

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Carrie Lam

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