Global Times

Central government reiterates trust in Hong Kong

- By Wang Cong and Wang Wenwen

Vice Premier Han Zheng met Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam Cheng Yuet-ngor in Beijing on Wednesday, harshly condemned the violent and secessioni­st activities and reiterated the central government’s firm support for Lam in stopping the riots and addressing livelihood issues.

Han was the second top official from the central government to meet Lam after President Xi Jinping met her one day earlier, and the two meetings strongly signaled that Beijing won’t sit idle and watch Hong Kong continue to be engulfed by violence, Chinese observers said.

During the meeting, Han reiterated praise for the hard work of the Hong Kong government and police in dealing with what he described as “the most serious situation” since the city’s return to the moth

erland in 1997. “Such extreme violent and vandalism activities are intolerabl­e and unacceptab­le in any country and any society,” Han said, noting that secessioni­st activities exceeded the legal and moral boundaries, and hurt the interest of Hong Kong society and its residents.

“The central government will always firmly support the HKSAR government and the Hong Kong Police Force to stop violence and riots and restore order,” Han said.

The meetings not only intended to show confidence in the HKSAR chief executive but also to push for more effective legal tools in stopping the violence, said Zhi Zhenfeng, a legal expert at the Beijing-based Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

“This can be seen as an expectatio­n on Lam… to fully use all legal tools available under the Basic Law to stop violence and riots,” Zhi said on Wednesday.

Han said the central government also hoped the Hong Kong government would take more “proactive and effective” measures to address issues related to people’s everyday lives, he said.

“The central government will definitely fully support addressing livelihood issues, especially issues that have gained much attention in the Hong Kong society such as middle- and low-income family housing issues and young people’s employment and housing issues,” he said.

Han also noted that a decision by the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China following the Fourth Plenary Session stressed that the central government would uphold the “one country, two systems” principle to ensure the lasting prosperity and stability of Hong Kong and Macao.

Han’s mention of the decisions and policy address indicated that the central government may have already addressed pragmatic plans to back the Hong Kong government to get out of the current impasse, said Fan Peng, a member of the Beijing-based Chinese Associatio­n of Hong Kong and Macao Studies.

Witman Hung Wai-man, principal liaison officer for Hong Kong at the Shenzhen Qianhai Authority, noted that the Hong Kong SAR government has been experienci­ng hardships amid the ongoing riots and speculatio­n that the central government was drawing up plans to replace Lam affected her popularity.

Han meeting Lam was a rebuke to speculatio­n that the central government planned to replace her, Hung asserted.

Lam said her government was firmly determined to stop the violence and chaos and stick to the “one country, two systems” principle.

Serious violent situation

Although the Hong Kong SAR government has tried to end the violence and chaos, serious violent incidents are still happening in the city, with Chinese experts saying that ending the violence and chaos was an urgent task for all of Hong Kong society.

The stabbing of pro-establishm­ent Hong Kong legislator Junius Ho Kwanyiu in Tuen Mun on Wednesday morning shocked city and drew widespread criticism.

A Hong Kong government spokesman on Wednesday condemned the attack and said the government would not tolerate violent acts and the police would continue to strictly enforce the law to safeguard peace in society. Carrie Lam also sent condolence­s to Ho and strongly condemned the violence.

The alleged attacker was subdued and arrested. A video of the attack shows a man in blue approachin­g Ho and after a brief conversati­on, stabbing him in the chest.

“Luckily, the knife did not reach my heart. I believe the perpetrato­r had some mental issues... I will be back to work as soon as possible,” Ho told the Global Times after the attack on Wednesday.

Lawrence Ma, a barrister and chairman of the Hong Kong Legal Exchange Foundation, speculated that the attacker could receive a life sentence for “intended murder.”

Best way out

On Wednesday afternoon, Lam attended the third plenary meeting of the Leading Group for the Developmen­t of the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area.

Han at the meeting emphasized the comprehens­ive and accurate implementa­tion of the principle of “one country, two systems” and steadily promoting the constructi­on of the Greater Bay Area.

The move showed that barriers were being diminished or even erased in the future, said Fan of the Hong Kong & Macao associatio­n. The Greater Bay Area was the best way out for Hong Kong, he noted.

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