Business Day

China furious after Australia halts extraditio­n treaty with Hong Kong

- Kirsty Needham Sydney

Australia said on Thursday it was suspending its extraditio­n treaty with Hong Kong in response to a new security law imposed there, and announced measures to attract businesses from the Asian financial hub, provoking an angry response from Beijing.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison said that the law introduced last week in Hong Kong was a fundamenta­l change of circumstan­ces and Australia would suspend the extraditio­n agreement.

“There will be citizens of Hong Kong who may be looking to move elsewhere, to start a new life somewhere else, to take their skills, their businesses,” he said, outlining changes to visa programmes.

Morrison said Hong Kong students, graduates and workers in Australia on temporary visas will have the opportunit­y to stay and work for an extra five years and apply for permanent residency after that time.

Future student visas would also be offered for five years, but Morrison said they were “not expecting large numbers of applicants any time soon”.

Speaking in Beijing, foreign ministry spokespers­on Zhao Lijian said Morrison’s government should change course and stop interferin­g in Chinese affairs, warning that China, the biggest customer for Australian exports, reserved the right to take retaliator­y action.

The Chinese embassy in Canberra warned that unless Australia stopped meddling “it will lead to nothing but lifting a rock only to hit its own feet”.

Two-way trade between the countries was worth A$235bn in 2019.

There are 10,000 Hong Kong citizens in Australia on student visas or temporary work visas, with a further 2,500 outside Australia and 1,250 applicatio­ns on hand, according to the government.

Hong Kong applicants would be prioritise­d under Australia’s Global Talent Scheme and business visa programme.

“There is so much talent in Hong Kong,” said acting immigratio­n minister Alan Tudge.

“There are great businesses in Hong Kong. And we know that many individual­s now might be looking elsewhere, because they do want to be in a freer country, they want to be in a democratic country.”

ASYLUM OFFER

Australia offered asylum to about 42,000 Chinese students who were in Australia after a violent crackdown on prodemocra­cy protests Tiananmen Square in 1989.

Imposed after months of mass protests that sometimes resulted in violent clashes between police and pro-democracy supporters, Hong Kong’s new security law punishes acts of secession, subversion, terrorism and collusion with foreign forces with up to life in prison.

Morrison also made a pitch for internatio­nal financial services, consulting and media businesses with regional headquarte­rs in Hong Kong to relocate to Australia, saying his government would proactivel­y encourage that.

He said measures would be accommodat­ed within Australia’s

existing caps on permanent resident visas, and Hong Kong citizens could also apply to the humanitari­an and refugee visa programme.

Hong Kong student Dennis Chan, who attends university in New South Wales and is a spokespers­on for community group Australia-Hong Kong Link, welcomed the stance taken by Australia.

But, he said some graduates were worried they were not covered, as many had returned to Hong Kong and were on bridging visas, unable to return to Australia because of Covid-19.

“People who protested in Hong Kong are facing difficulti­es leaving Hong Kong to come to Australia,” he said.

Australia changed its travel advisory for Hong Kong, where about 100,000 Australian­s live and work, to say “reconsider your need to remain in Hong Kong” if they are concerned about the new law.

Last week, Canada announced it would suspend its extraditio­n treaty with Hong Kong in the wake of the legislatio­n and could boost immigratio­n from the former British colony.

New Zealand said it was also reviewing its relations with Hong Kong, and would review extraditio­n arrangemen­ts, controls on exports of strategic goods and travel advice.

THERE ARE GREAT BUSINESSES IN HONG KONG. AND WE KNOW THAT MANY INDIVIDUAL­S NOW MIGHT BE LOOKING ELSEWHERE

 ??  ?? Scott Morrison
Scott Morrison

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