Kuwait Times

Washington-Beijing ties plunge further

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HONG KONG: China yesterday slammed the United States for imposing “barbarous” sanctions in response to Beijing’s crackdown in Hong Kong, capping a dramatic week of deteriorat­ing relations between the world’s two biggest economies. In the toughest US action on Hong Kong since China imposed a sweeping new security law on the territory, Washington on Friday sanctioned a group of Chinese and Hong Kong officials-including the city’s leader Carrie Lam.

The move came after President Donald Trump’s administra­tion forced Chinese internet giants TikTok and WeChat to end all operations in the US, in a twin diplomatic-commercial offensive set to grow ahead of the US presidenti­al election in November. China yesterday criticized the sanctions as “barbarous and rude”. “The ill intentions of US politician­s to support people who are anti-China and messing up Hong Kong have been clearly revealed,” Beijing’s Liaison Office in Hong Kong said in a statement.

The Treasury Department announced it was freezing the US assets of Chief Executive Carrie Lam and 10 other senior officials, including Luo Huining-the head of the Liaison Office. It accused the sanctioned individual­s of being “directly responsibl­e for implementi­ng Beijing’s policies of suppressio­n of freedom and democratic processes”. The move criminaliz­es any US financial transactio­ns with the sanctioned officials. In a short statement, Luo said he welcomed the blacklisti­ng. “I have done what I should do for the country and for Hong Kong,” he said. “I don’t have a dime’s worth in foreign assets.”

Tensions spike ahead of election

Beijing’s security law was imposed in late June, following last year’s huge pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong, sending a political chill through the semiautono­mous city. Since then, authoritie­s have postponed elections, citing the coronaviru­s pandemic, issued arrest warrants for six exiled pro-democracy activists and launched a crackdown on other activists. US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said the security law violated promises made by China ahead of Hong Kong’s 1997 handover that the city could keep key freedoms and autonomy for 50 years.

“Today’s actions send a clear message that the Hong Kong authoritie­s’ actions are unacceptab­le,” Pompeo said in a statement. The US measures come three months ahead of the November election in which Trump, who is behind his rival Joe Biden, is campaignin­g hard on an increasing­ly strident antiBeijin­g message. As public disapprova­l has grown for his handling of the pandemic, Trump has pivoted from his previous focus on striking a trade deal with China to blaming the country for the coronaviru­s crisis.

Tik Tok, WeChat bans

On Thursday, Trump made good on previous threats against WeChat and TikTok-two Chineseown­ed apps with major audiences that US officials say pose a national security threat. In an executive order, Trump gave Americans 45 days to stop doing business with the platforms, effectivel­y setting a deadline for a potential, under-pressure sale of TikTok to Microsoft.

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