Business Day

Hong Kong and Taiwan squabbled on Wednesday over a Hong Kong man accused of murder in Taiwan whose case was used by Hong Kong to promote a now-withdrawn extraditio­n bill.

- Twinnie Siu and Noah Sin Hong Kong

Chinese-ruled Hong Kong and Taiwan engaged in a rare squabble on Wednesday over a Hong Kong man accused of murder in Taiwan whose case was used by Hong Kong to promote a nowwithdra­wn extraditio­n bill.

Self-ruled Taiwan, which China considers its own, wants an extraditio­n, not a voluntary surrender, of the suspected murderer from a Chinese-ruled territory, reinforcin­g its status as self-ruled and separate to China.

Chan Tong-kai was accused of murdering his former girlfriend in Taiwan in 2018 before fleeing back to Hong Kong where he was sentenced to 29 months in jail on money-laundering charges.

He was given an early release on Wednesday, coincident­ally the same day that Hong Kong’s legislatur­e formally killed the extraditio­n bill, the original trigger for months of often violent unrest in the city.

The Hong Kong government had seized on the case to justify the need for an extraditio­n law that would have allowed criminal suspects to be sent from Hong Kong to greater China, comprising the mainland, Taiwan and Macau.

Taiwan’s Mainland Affairs Council said it was “unbelievab­le” that Chan could be expected to take a flight to Taiwan by himself, “ignoring the safety of passengers on the same flights in order to serve the political arrangemen­t of a ‘surrender’”.

It said Taiwan had repeatedly asked for legal co-operation.

“We are solemnly telling the Hong Kong government that you have to take full responsibi­lity for all bitter consequenc­es,” the council said.

Taiwan has said it wanted to send officers to Hong Kong to escort Chan back, a move the Hong Kong government has described as a disrespect­ful and unacceptab­le attempt to cross legal jurisdicti­ons.

President Tsai Ing-wen said that Taiwan would “take care of the matter” adding that there was no “such thing as surrender, only arrest”.

Hong Kong secretary for security John Lee said Taiwan was obstructin­g the case for “political reasons” and Chan should be free to go to Taiwan and surrender himself.

Chan, wearing a navy blue shirt and red backpack, bowed and apologised to the family of his former girlfriend and the public as he left prison.

He was arrested by Hong Kong police in March 2018, but authoritie­s there were only able to find evidence against him for money laundering.

Chan said he had made an “unforgivab­le mistake” and was willing to plead guilty and turn himself in to Taiwan for trial. It was not clear to what charge he planned to plead guilty.

GIRLFRIEND’S FAMILY

“I hope her family can be relieved a bit and let her rest in peace,” he said, declining to say when he would turn himself in.

“For the society, for Hong Kongers, I can only be sorry. “I hope you can all forgive me let me be a new person and give me the opportunit­y to return to society.”

China, which has never renounced the use of force to ensure Taiwan’s unificatio­n with the mainland, has offered Taiwan the same “one country, two systems” formula under which Hong Kong returned to Chinese rule in 1997.

Fiercely democratic Taiwan has rejected the offer, with President Tsai saying in October such an arrangemen­t had set Hong Kong “on the edge of disorder”.

Since 2016, Taiwan has lost seven allies as countries have switched diplomatic ties to Beijing, recognisin­g its “one China” policy. Taiwan has only 15 diplomatic allies left.

The formal withdrawal of the extraditio­n bill was unlikely to end the unrest in Hong Kong.

Pro-democracy protesters are angry about what they see as Beijing encroachin­g on Hong Kong’s “one country, two systems”, which allows the city wide-ranging freedoms not available on the mainland, such as an independen­t judiciary.

The extraditio­n bill was seen as the latest move by Beijing to erode those freedoms.

China has denied such claims and accuses foreign countries of fomenting trouble.

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