The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Lam confirms no consular protection for dual nationals

-

HONG KONG: Hong Kongers with dual nationalit­y are not entitled to foreign consular assistance, the city’s leader said yesterday, confirming warnings by western diplomats that authoritie­s have begun strictly enforcing Chinese nationalit­y regulation­s in the finance hub.

Canada’s foreign affairs department announced last week that a dual-national in prison in Hong Kong was required to make a declaratio­n choosing a single nationalit­y.

The revelation sent diplomats from Britain, Canada and the United States scrambling given the potential implicatio­ns for hundreds of thousands of Hong Kongers in the city with dual nationalit­y – and those who travel there for business and tourism.

Chief executive Carrie Lam yesterday confirmed that while residents could own multiple passports, dual nationalit­y was not recognised in Hong Kong under China’s nationalit­y law.

“That (law) has a very specific provision that where people (who) have foreign nationalit­y or right of abode elsewhere... are regarded as Chinese nationals in Hong Kong,” Lam told reporters.

“So likewise they will not be eligible for consular protection, including consular visits,” she added, unless they have received permission to renounce their Chinese nationalit­y

Beijing’s top-lawmaking body set the rules for implementi­ng national in Hong Kong back in 1996 – the year before Hong Kong’s handover by Britain.

As a result Hong Kong officials have described the move to reject consular assistance for dual nationals as nothing new.

But western diplomats say there has been a concrete policy change because they had previously had no problem visiting dual nationals in custody.

No Hong Kong official, including Lam, has publicly addressed whether any order has been made to more strictly enforce nationalit­y rules.

But on Monday night, Britain’s consulate changed its travel advice after it said it had been informed that “Hong Kong, like other parts of China, does not recognise dual nationalit­y”.

“If you have both British and Chinese nationalit­y you may be treated as a Chinese citizen by local authoritie­s, even if you enter Hong Kong on your British passport,” the consulate warned.

“If this is the case, the British consulate may not be able to offer you consular assistance.”

The apparent change comes as Beijing clashes with Western nations over its crackdown in the finance hub following 2019’s huge and often violent democracy protests. The change is most likely to effect ethnic Chinese dual citizens in Hong Kong.

Mainland China has even stricter dual citizenshi­p laws where people are not allowed to own another country’s passport – although many, especially wealthy elites, simply keep that ownership secret.

Last month, the UK began offering extended visas to holders of British National (Overseas) passports, which all Hong Kongers born before the 1997 handover are entitled to.

Beijing responded by announcing it would no longer recognise the passports.

That (law) has a very specific provision that where people (who) have foreign nationalit­y or right of abode elsewhere... are regarded as Chinese nationals in Hong Kong. So likewise they will not be eligible for consular protection, including consular visits.

Carrie Lam

 ??  ?? Carrie Lam
Carrie Lam

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia