Business Day

Scores march over city bill on ejection

- Jessie Pang and Noah Sin Hong Kong

Thousands of people protested in Hong Kong on Sunday against a government plan to change extraditio­n laws, fearing an erosion of personal freedom and the city’s status as an internatio­nal business hub.

The Hong Kong government proposal, announced in February, would grant the city’s leader executive power to send fugitives to jurisdicti­ons not covered by existing rules, including mainland China and Taiwan.

Organisers said 12,000 people took to the streets on Sunday, while police estimated the crowd at 5,200 at its peak.

“Hong Kong people all have to bear the negative consequenc­e of this ordinance. This carries the risk of personal freedom being restricted,” Lam Wing-kee, a bookseller who said in 2016 he was detained by Chinese agents, told the crowd. The government said last week it will present the amendments to legislator­s on Wednesday.

The planned changes have been strongly opposed by some legislator­s, and legal and rights groups who fear that it could be exploited by Beijing’s Communist Party leaders and hurt Hong Kong’s judicial independen­ce.

“We are gravely concerned that anyone extradited to China will be at risk of torture and other ill-treatment and other grave human rights violations,” Amnesty Internatio­nal, Human Rights Watch and Hong Kong Human Rights Monitor wrote in an open letter to Carrie Lam, the city’s leader, on Sunday.

Since Hong Kong reverted from British to Chinese rule in 1997 with the guarantee that it would enjoy freedoms not allowed in mainland China, there has been no formal mechanism for the surrender of fugitives to mainland China.

Hong Kong secretary for security John Lee said last week the government had no plans to scrap the bill. “It is not an easy decision, but it is a cautious, careful and serious decision,” he said, adding that the Hong Kong government “has the sole right to decide whether or not to process extraditio­n requests”.

Hong Kong’s business community has expressed concern over the inclusion of economic and financial crimes in the bill. The government later removed nine types of crime relevant to bankruptcy, financial trade and intellectu­al property.

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