Toronto Star

China approves Hong Kong security law

Reports say legislativ­e body okays measures aimed to quell dissent

- IAIN MARLOW

HONGKONG— China’s top legislativ­e body approved a landmark national security law for Hong Kong, a sweeping attempt to quell dissent that risks U.S. retaliatio­n and the city’s appeal as a financial hub.

The National People’s Congress Standing Committee voted unanimousl­y to approve the law on the former British colony when it wrapped up a threeday meeting Tuesday in Beijing, multiple Hong Kong media organizati­ons reported, citing unidentifi­ed people.

The official Xinhua News Agency was to publish details of the law Tuesday afternoon, marking the first time the law will be fully disclosed to the public, the South China Morning Post reported, citing a source familiar with the situation.

Speaking shortly after the reports, Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam said she couldn’t confirm whether the law had been approved. She acknowledg­ed that residents in the city had many concerns about the measure before pivoting to discuss job-support subsidies.

“The National People’s Congress is still in a meeting and on the agenda today there’s the relevant national security law for Hong Kong,” Lam said. “At this moment it is inappropri­ate for me to respond to any questions or give any explanatio­ns.”

The measure to punish acts of secession, subversion, terrorism and collusion with foreign forces comes on the eve of the July 1 anniversar­y of Hong Kong’s return to Chinese rule in 1997. The organizer of an annual march that drew more than half a million people last year is making a last-minute appeal to hold the event, after being denied permission by police, who cited coronaviru­s risk and the potential for violence.

The new law will shape the future of Hong Kong, whose civil liberties, free markets and independen­t judicial system have attracted hundreds of internatio­nal companies. President Donald Trump warned last month the U.S. would start rolling back Hong Kong’s preferenti­al trade status, while the U.K. and Taiwan have offered new paths to residency for the city’s 7.5 million inhabitant­s.

The Trump administra­tion on Monday made it harder to export sensitive American technology to Hong Kong, suspending regulation­s allowing special treatment to the territory over dual-use technologi­es like carbon fiber used to make both golf clubs and missile components. Lam on Tuesday called the impact of the move “minimal” and refuted the U.S. accusation that such sensitive items could make it to the mainland, saying Hong Kong has “a stringent trade-control mechanism.”

Hong Kong’s freedoms have become increasing­ly tenuous as President Xi Jinping grows more confident in China’s ability to withstand foreign pressure and Hong Kong protesters embrace more radical positions such as independen­ce. Beijing’s steady moves to better integrate the city boiled over into historic and sometimes violent protests last year, after Lam attempted to pass a bill allowing extraditio­ns to the mainland.

The new law goes further toward revising the “one country, two systems” framework designed to protect Hong Kong’s liberal institutio­ns and Common Law legal system. The legislatio­n will let Chinese security agents operate in Hong Kong, allow China to prosecute some cases and give Lam the power to pick judges to hear national security matters.

“You have in Hong Kong the Common Law system and imposing on it what passes as the law in China will produce chaos which will be intolerabl­e for the people of Hong Kong and eventually will be intolerabl­e for business, as well,” Chris Patten, the territory’s last colonial governor, said Monday. “Hong Kong represents all those aspects of liberal democracy which Xi Jinping so hates.”

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