China Daily

New security law will make HK safer place

China’s ambassador to Washington offers reassuranc­e to US citizens

- By ZHAO HUANXIN in Washington huanxinzha­o@chinadaily­usa.com

For the tens of thousands of US citizens living and working in Hong Kong, Beijing’s top envoy in Washington has a clear message: China’s recent national security legislatio­n on the region will only make the port city safer and more secure for them.

More than 1,350 US multinatio­nal companies have offices in Hong Kong, which is also inhabited by at least 85,000 US citizens, according to informatio­n from China’s Foreign Ministry and the government of the Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region, or HKSAR.

Reports were rife in some foreign media in recent days that China’s national security laws to be promulgate­d and enforced in Hong Kong cast a “dark cloud” over the fate of the US businesses and residents in the HKSAR and would jeopardize the future of the region.

On Thursday, as the National People’s Congress, or NPC, China’s top legislativ­e body, wrapped up its annual session, Chinese lawmakers voted overwhelmi­ngly at the meeting to approve a decision on establishi­ng and improving the legal system and enforcemen­t mechanisms for the HKSAR to safeguard national security.

“Many Americans who live and work in Hong Kong may wonder what the legislatio­n will mean for them. The answer is that it will provide a safer and more secure environmen­t,” said Cui Tiankai, China’s ambassador to the US, in a weekend op-ed article on the Bloomberg website.

“The legislatio­n is only targeted at actions that jeopardize China’s national security, such as splitting the country, subverting the government, committing terrorist activities and externally meddling in Hong Kong affairs,” he wrote.

“People who have nothing to do with these should have no worries.”

More opportunit­ies

The ambassador pointed out that a stable and prosperous Hong Kong will bring more opportunit­ies to its residents and investors.

“In fact, the legislatio­n will protect law-abiding citizens, ensure Hong Kong’s high degree of autonomy and contribute to a sound legal and business environmen­t there,” he wrote.

Talking about the legitimacy of the legislatio­n, Cui said that in all countries, unitary and federal alike, only the central government has the legislativ­e authority to decide issues concerning national security.

“Similarly, China’s central government has the primary and ultimate responsibi­lity for upholding national security, and the NPC is the highest-level legislatur­e in China,” he said.

Paul Chan, the HKSAR government’s financial secretary, also said in a blog post on Sunday that the national security legislatio­n is aimed at restoring peace and a safe and stable business environmen­t and that there is no need for businesses to worry about it.

The United States has important interests in Hong Kong. Almost all major US financial companies operate in the region, and the US trade surplus with the area has grown to $297 billion in the past decade, ranking first among the US’ global trading partners, according to a release from China’s Foreign Ministry on Friday.

Hong Kong is often a transfer point for US exports ultimately destined for the Chinese mainland, according to the “2020 State Export Report”, a study released by the US-China Business Council in April.

There was a 16.2 percent decline in US exports to Hong Kong, knocking it off the top 10 list last year, but Hong Kong remained a top-five services export market for Alaska in 2018 and a top-five goods export destinatio­n for New York state ($5.4 billion) and Vermont ($198 million) in 2019, according to the report, which looks at goods and services exports by US states to China over the past decade.

“You’d be shooting yourself in the foot” if the US administra­tion cut off Hong Kong on trade and other economic relations, said Nicholas Lardy, a specialist on China’s economy at the Peterson Institute for Internatio­nal Economics, as quoted in the Los Angeles Times on Thursday.

Many Americans who live and work in Hong Kong may wonder what the legislatio­n will mean for them. The answer is that it will provide a safer and more secure environmen­t.” Cui Tiankai, China’s ambassador to the US

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