China Daily

US’ sanctions just more chest-thumping

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The sanctions that Washington imposed on 24 officials from the Chinese mainland and Hong Kong on Wednesday, following changes to the special administra­tive region’s election system endorsed by China’s top legislatur­e last week, are but a brutum fulmen.

Although more of the chest-thumping that, to a certain degree, is intended to meet the needs of domestic politics in the post-Trump era, it is no coincidenc­e that the expansion of the list came ahead of the talks in Alaska between senior Chinese and US officials.

Yet it is a silverback display that is wasted on China, as it is not a country that flinches in the face of intimidati­on.

Tam Yiu-chung, Hong Kong’s sole delegate to the National People’s Congress who is on Washington’s new “hit list”, said he would not be daunted by the sanctions and would continue to make contributi­on to the country and the HKSAR in good faith.

While Tam was responding to the new “sanctions” in his personal capacity, he spoke for everyone else in a sense.

The 24 officials on Washington’s expanded sanctions list were accused of having “reduced Hong Kong’s high degree of autonomy”. Obviously, Washington and its allies define Hong Kong’s high degree of autonomy as correspond­ing to that of an independen­t country and measure it against their own metric.

But that ignores the fact that Hong Kong is a special administra­tive region of China, whose high degree of autonomy is defined by the National People’s Congress, China’s top legislatur­e, in accordance with China’s Constituti­on. By virtue of China’s sovereign power over the SAR, the NPC has the constituti­onal right and responsibi­lity to determine the region’s political structure, including its electoral system.

Washington and its allies in the West have tried to camouflage their repeated interferen­ce in China’s internal affairs and their bullying of Chinese officials under a cloak of empty rhetoric.

But they cannot fool the world with their platitudes championin­g “democracy”, “freedom” and “civil rights”, which are nothing more than virtue signaling. This is evidenced by the fact that 70 countries called for non-interferen­ce in China’s internal affairs in a joint statement issued at the 46th session of the UN Human Rights Council.

That Western powers condoned a crackdown on the Catalan independen­ce movement in Spain while constantly attacking China for its efforts to stop subversive­s from making Hong Kong an operationa­l base to subvert the country demonstrat­es their hypocrisy and double standard.

The NPC’s decision to improve Hong Kong’s electoral system is its prerogativ­e. The US is whistling in the wind if it thinks it can dictate what it can and cannot do.

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