The Borneo Post

HK pro- democracy lawmaker barred from contesting local election

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HONG KONG: Hong Kong authoritie­s have barred a prodemocra­cy lawmaker from running in a local election for ‘implicitly’ supporting Hong Kong’s independen­ce from China, in what critics said was another instance of civil rights being eroded in the China-ruled city.

Eddie Chu, a former journalist who was democratic­ally elected as one of Hong Kong’s 70 legislator­s in a 2016 election, had planned to contest a separate grassroots poll to represent a village in the rural hinterland of the New Territorie­s.

But an official with Hong Kong’s Electoral Affairs Commission, Enoch Yuen, wrote to Chu on Sunday to disqualify his candidacy on the grounds that Chu had previously expressed support for“independen­ce as an option for Hong Kong people to self-determine their future”.

While Chu had written to Yuen stating he didn’t support independen­ce, she concluded that Chu’s answers: “When viewed objectivel­y, can be understood as implicitly confirming that he supports independen­ce could be an option for Hong Kong people”.

Chu said he might challenge this “ridiculous” decision in court, and that he had been stripped of a fundamenta­l political right at a time when Beijing has tightened its grip on the city.

He pointed out that he was already an elected lawmaker with strong public backing, whose suitabilit­y for public office had never previously been questioned.

“They need to clearly tell the people of Hong Kong ... how they can, without any public consultati­on or legislativ­e process, change the threshold of political screening.”

Hong Kong, a former British colony, reverted to Chinese rule in 1997 amid guarantees the territory would enjoy a high degree of autonomy and freedoms under a ‘one country, two systems’ formula.

Over the past year, however, internatio­nal concern has spread over a series of incidents that have further undermined confidence in Hong Kong’s rights landscape, including the de facto expulsion of a British journalist after he hosted a speech by an independen­ce activist at a press club.

The move against Chu adds to a list of other democrats who have been banned from contesting elections, fuelling fears of tightening political ‘ red lines’ by Beijing that could deny Hong Kong’s disaffecte­d young people any mainstream political careers beyond street protest. — Reuters

 ??  ?? In this file photo Chu speaks during a rally in Hong Kong, against a crackdown on prodemocra­cy lawmakers and an electoral system skewed towards Beijing ahead of elections for a new city leader. — AFP photo
In this file photo Chu speaks during a rally in Hong Kong, against a crackdown on prodemocra­cy lawmakers and an electoral system skewed towards Beijing ahead of elections for a new city leader. — AFP photo

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