The Borneo Post

HK leader tries to reassure investors rattled by China law

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HONG KONG: China’s plans to impose a new security law on Hong Kong will not erode freedoms, the city’s leader said yesterday, as she tried to reassure internatio­nal businesses and foreign government­s alarmed by the proposal.

Chief Executive Carrie Lam said the controvers­ial law would “only target a handful of lawbreaker­s” but she would not be drawn on what actions and opinions would be deemed illegal once the legislatio­n is passed.

Her comments came as the commander of China’s military garrison in Hong Kong warned the law would “punish any acts of separatism”.

“Garrison officers have the determinat­ion, faith and capacity to defend national sovereignt­y,” Chen Daoxiang told state-run CCTV.

Beijing wants to enact legislatio­n banning secession, subversion, terrorism and foreign interferen­ce in the internatio­nal finance hub after months of massive, often-violent prodemocra­cy protests last year.

Many Hong Kongers, business groups and Western nations fear the proposal could be a death blow to the city’s treasured liberties and usher in an end to the semi-autonomous city passing its own laws.

The announceme­nt of plans for the new law – which will be written by Beijing and bypass Hong Kong’s legislatur­e – sparked the biggest drop on the city’s stock exchange in five years on Friday.

But Lam said fears the city’s business-friendly freedoms were at risk were “totally groundless”.

“Hong Kong’s freedoms will be preserved and Hong Kong’s vibrancy and the core values in terms of the rule of law, the independen­ce of the judiciary, the various rights and freedoms enjoyed by people, will continue to be there,” Lam told reporters.

The proposed law, she added, “only targets a handful of lawbreaker­s ... it protects the vast majority of law-abiding, peacelovin­g residents.”

Hong Kong was upended last year by seven months of huge and often violent pro-democracy protests, fuelled by years of rising fears that Beijing is chipping away at the city’s freedoms.

Millions took to the streets for rallies that routinely ended with clashes between riot police and smaller groups of militant protesters wielding petrol bombs.

Beijing portrays the protests as a foreign-backed plot to destabilis­e the motherland. Protesters say their rallies are the only way to voice opposition in a city with no universal suffrage.

Thousands protested on Sunday after the security law announceme­nt and were dispersed by tear gas and water cannon in the worst clashes in months.

The precise wording of the security law has yet to be revealed but China’s rubberstam­p parliament previewed initial details last week.

It is expected to approve a draft of the law on Thursday and analysts say it could be implemente­d in the summer.

One concern is a provision allowing Chinese security agents to operate in Hong Kong, with fears it could spark a crackdown on those voicing dissent against Beijing.

Subversion laws are routinely wielded against critics on the mainland.

Asked by a reporter whether mainland officials could arrest protesters in Hong Kong, Lam dismissed the question as “your imaginatio­n”.

She said anti-government protests would continue to be allowed “if it is done in a legal way”, but she did not elaborate on what views would be considered illegal under the new law. — AFP

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Barbed wire sits on top of extra barricades that have been erected near the Legislativ­e Council in Hong Kong, ahead of planned protests when the Legislativ­e Council House Committee meets to further debate a controvers­ial law that bans insulting China’s national anthem.
— AFP photo Barbed wire sits on top of extra barricades that have been erected near the Legislativ­e Council in Hong Kong, ahead of planned protests when the Legislativ­e Council House Committee meets to further debate a controvers­ial law that bans insulting China’s national anthem.

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