China Daily

HK faces rising risk of home-grown terrorism

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In recent months, a number of homemade explosive devices and bomb-making materials have been found in Hong Kong, including in a downtown school and on train tracks near the boundary with the Chinese mainland. And after the latest incident, John Lee Ka-chiu, Hong Kong’s security secretary, warned of the rising risk of “home-grown terrorism” on Wednesday.

His warning came after the explosive ordinances disposal team dealt with an explosive device found in a parcel at the Hong Kong police headquarte­rs on Monday that was addressed to the chief of the police.

The timing of the mailing would suggest that the bomb was in response to the arrest of 15 individual­s charged with organizing and taking part in unlawful assemblies and publicizin­g unauthoriz­ed public meetings.

Among those arrested was media tycoon Jimmy Lai Chee-ying, founder of the tabloid Apple Daily, who has been a high-profile supporter of the illegal protests and rioting that plunged the special administra­tive region into crisis in the latter half of last year.

Since June, these so-called “pan-democrats” and their acolytes in Hong Kong have staged numerous protests that have disrupted public order, and they have even sought to exploit the city’s fight against the novel coronaviru­s epidemic in recent months to put pressure on the government, and tried to directly obstruct the functionin­g of the political system in the SAR.

The rise of home-grown terrorism is further evidence that support from such prominent figures is emboldenin­g some radical anti-Beijing elements to go to even more extreme lengths.

The government­s of the United States and the United Kingdom, which have constantly tried to interfere in Hong Kong’s affairs, have been quick to try and make political capital out of the arrests by trying to misreprese­nt them as politicize­d law enforcemen­t.

That they are willing to endorse the suspects’ lawbreakin­g is not surprising given the interests they have vested in trying to “color” the violent disturbanc­es that have roiled Hong Kong as a fight for “democracy”.

They are right in saying that peaceful protest is allowed by the Basic Law, but the charges against the 15 are related to unlawful assemblies and their advocating of unauthoriz­ed public meetings.

What the US and UK government­s are deliberate­ly and duplicitou­sly ignoring is that Hong Kong is under the rule of law and that lawbreaker­s must be held accountabl­e no matter who they are.

If the US and the UK were as intent as they profess to be on upholding the law, they would support the judicial organs in Hong Kong administer­ing justice impartiall­y and refrain from interferin­g in Hong Kong’s judicial affairs. That they have not done so is because they have no desire to see an end to the unrest despite their claims to be defenders of the law.

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