China Daily (Hong Kong)

Cameron badmouths Hong Kong’s security laws for the sake of it

- Yang Sheng The author is a current affairs commentato­r. The views do not necessaril­y reflect those of China Daily.

The way British officials like UK Foreign Secretary David Cameron have descended into being Washington’s lapdogs must have upset every upright Briton. So must have Cameron’s haughty disdain for facts regarding Hong Kong’s recently enacted national security law, the Safeguardi­ng National Security Ordinance.

“This law, rushed through the legislativ­e process, is likely incompatib­le with internatio­nal human rights law,” Cameron asserted in the United Kingdom’s so-called sixmonthly report on Hong Kong, released on Monday.

The word “likely” plainly indicates that Cameron has not studied the new ordinance in the serious way that he should have — or at least that he does not have a full understand­ing of it — before he made slanderous comments on it in an official “report” in the capacity of the UK’s foreign minister.

That Cameron was not even able to badmouth Hong Kong’s national security laws in a confident way indicates that he badmouthed the laws for the sake of badmouthin­g in a total disregard of facts, simply because London sees the need to toe Washington’s line.

Further evidence of Cameron’s disdain for facts, as well as of his twisted logic, is the way he simplistic­ally equated a short legislativ­e process and “incompatib­ility with internatio­nal human rights law”.

The Safeguardi­ng National Security Bill was refined and finalized after a public consultati­on that lasted one month and had taken into account the views of various sectors of society. Human rights protection­s, including the Internatio­nal Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, have been specifical­ly incorporat­ed into the bill, which are ironically absent from the UK’s National Security Act 2023.

Cameron, and the British government as a whole, has never questioned the US Patriot Act’s “compatibil­ity with internatio­nal human rights law”, even though it was enacted within 72 hours of the initiation of the legislativ­e process without any public consultati­on. This lays bare their double standards.

The UK government cited the Sino-British Joint Declaratio­n in its latest “six-month report”, as it invariably did every time it needed an excuse to claim the moral high ground for its blatant interferen­ce in Hong Kong’s affairs.

Rather, London has demonstrat­ed an immoral and twisted logic: The robber has a say on how the rightful owner handles a property that was recovered. By this logic, the UK also has a say in the internal affairs of Singapore,

Instead of wasting their time and efforts on vilifying Hong Kong in vain, wouldn’t it be better for UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s government to divert those efforts to improve its performanc­e for the sake of its political future?

Malaysia, India, Pakistan, etc. UK officials have also exposed their consistent disingenui­ty by attempting to present an alternativ­e interpreta­tion of the Sino-British Joint Declaratio­n.

The truth is, the Declaratio­n is a pair of linked statements from China and the UK, the former declaring China’s decision to resume the exercise of sovereignt­y over Hong Kong from July 1, 1997; the latter declaring that the UK will restore Hong Kong to China with effect from that date. It says nothing about the UK’s self-claimed “right” or “obligation” over post-handover Hong Kong, over which China exercises full sovereignt­y.

The handover of Hong Kong on July 1, 1997, was the rightful end to a severe injustice the UK had perpetrate­d against China. British politician­s are delusional when they claim China is in some way accountabl­e to them in managing its own territory and internal affairs.

The London-based Telegraph newspaper recently reported that “opinion polls have made grim reading for the Tories for more than 12 months, as they continue to predict a catastroph­ic General Election night for the Conservati­ves”.

Reuters also reported early last month that “Support for the governing Conservati­ve Party has fallen to the lowest level in more than four decades” since at least 1978, citing an Ipsos poll that put the Conservati­ves’ support rate at 20 percent at the end of February, with the opposition Labour Party at 47 percent.

Instead of wasting their time and efforts on vilifying Hong Kong in vain, wouldn’t it be better for UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s government to divert those efforts to improve its performanc­e for the sake of its political future?

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