Global Times

Lam: HK must strengthen education on Constituti­on

- By Yang Sheng

Hong Kong people, especially civil servants, need to strengthen their national awareness and identity, and education on the Chinese Constituti­on and the Basic Law, Chinese officials and experts said Wednesday at a forum in Hong Kong to commemorat­e national Constituti­on Day, and they also said national security legislatio­n in the city is necessary since the foreign forces continuous­ly interfere in Hong Kong affairs in the months-long turmoil.

Chief Executive Carrie Lam of the Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region (HKSAR), Wang Zhimin, director of the central government’s liaison office in Hong Kong, and Shen Chunyao, director of the Legislativ­e Affairs Commission of the National People’s Congress Standing Committee, spoke at a seminar on Wednesday attended by about 700 people including the city’s top

officials, politician­s, educators and about 300 high school students, the Xinhua News Agency reported.

Lam said “the Constituti­on and the Basic Law form the constituti­onal foundation of the SAR government. We must strengthen education of these.”

The Hong Kong government should strengthen education on the Constituti­on and the Basic Law to promote the national identity and awareness among different groups of Hong Kong society, especially among civil servants and the youth, she noted.

Kennedy Wong Ying-ho, a solicitor of the Supreme Court of Hong Kong, told the Global Times on Wednesday that the government is the key to realizing this goal.

“The HKSAR government didn’t establish an evaluation system to test the knowledge and understand­ing on the Constituti­on and Basic Law for civil servants, educators, social workers and medical workers. There are only some study sessions which are not enough,” Wong said.

Chinese observers noted that after 1997, Hong Kong civil servants have gained huge power in city governance, but most had not studied enough of the Constituti­on, Basic Law and the “one country, two systems” principle, and that’s why some of them have some misunderst­anding and made mistakes implementi­ng the law.

The government should set up an examinatio­n system on the Constituti­on, Basic Law and “one country, two systems” for civil servants, Wong said. “The officials can get promotion only after they pass the exam.”

Article 23

Wang, director of the central government liaison office said at the forum that “in the past few months, extreme violent criminal activities that frequently happened in Hong Kong have seriously violated the rule of law and public order…and in essence, these activities are trying to challenge and undermine the ‘one country, two systems’ principle set by the Constituti­on and the Basic Law.”

Forum attendee Ip Kwokhim, an unofficial member of the government executive council and a Hong Kong delegate to the National People’s Congress in Beijing, said that in the months-long turmoil, the interferen­ce and interrupti­ons by foreign forces were “very clear and this has already threatened the national security and public order in the city.”

A national security law, Article 23 of the Basic Law, was an actual requiremen­t, Ip said.

Ip said he hoped the government seriously and actively considers pushing the legislatio­n forward and explains the necessity of the legislatio­n to the citizens rather than “sit and wait for the chance to come.”

Li Xiaobing, an expert on Hong Kong, Macao and Taiwan studies at Nankai University in Tianjin told the Global Times on Wednesday that in the short term, considerin­g the political situation and environmen­t in Hong Kong, the legislatio­n for Article 23 will not be easy, but the government could still use multiple measures to safeguard national security.

“As the Ministry of Foreign Affairs announced sanctions against five US-based NGOs which played a role in radical protests in Hong Kong, and the HKSAR government said it will follow and cooperate as this is the decision on diplomatic matters made by the central government. This means the HKSAR government can make contributi­ons to safeguard national security even without the legislatio­n of Article 23,” Li said.

The government hasn’t made full use of the common law system in Hong Kong to deal with foreign interferen­ce yet, said Li.

“As long as law enforcemen­t and the judicial organs in Hong Kong strictly implement the current law such as the Public Order Ordinance, they can effectivel­y contain the activities that threaten national security in the city.”

If Hong Kong judicial organs made rulings against national security, Lau Siu-kai, the vice-president of the Chinese Associatio­n of Hong Kong and Macao Studies, said that “then the interpreta­tion of the Basic Law by the Standing Committee of National People’s Congress would become more normalized, to make sure that the ‘one country, two systems’ principle is carried out in an accurate and comprehens­ive way.”

 ?? Photo: VCG ?? Students pose for photos after attending a National Constituti­on Day symposium at the Hong Kong Convention and Exhibition Centre on Wednesday, which is also China’s sixth national Constituti­on Day. Professors from the mainland and HK universiti­es, members from the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress were invited to speak.
Photo: VCG Students pose for photos after attending a National Constituti­on Day symposium at the Hong Kong Convention and Exhibition Centre on Wednesday, which is also China’s sixth national Constituti­on Day. Professors from the mainland and HK universiti­es, members from the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress were invited to speak.

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