Daily Dispatch

HK police stamp out national anthem law protests

US warns city may lose status as a global financial centre

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Hong Kong police cast a dragnet around the financial hub’s legislatur­e on Wednesday and fired pepper-ball rounds in the commercial district as they stamped down on protests against a bill banning insults to China’s national anthem.

The latest unrest comes days after China announced separate plans to impose a sweeping national security law on Hong Kong after last year’s huge and often violent pro-democracy rallies.

That move has prompted US president Donald Trump to warn that Hong Kong might lose its status as a global financial centre if the city’s freedoms and vaunted judicial independen­ce are swept aside.

Wednesday’s protests were sparked by a debate over a new law that will criminalis­e insults to the national anthem with up to three years in jail, the latest measure activists say is eroding freedoms in the city.

Police surrounded the city’s legislatur­e with water-filled barriers and conducted widespread stop-and-search operations in a bid to deter mass gatherings.

Small flash mob rallies erupted in the densely populated districts of Causeway Bay,

Mongkok and Central, the latter broken up by officers firing crowd-control rounds filled with a pepper-based irritant.

Police said 240 people were arrested on suspicion of holding an unlawful assembly. Live images showed many of those being led away were teenagers.

In a statement police said they “respect the right of residents to express their views peacefully, but it must be carried out legally”, adding crowds were blocking roads.

Public gatherings of more than eight people are now banned under emergency anticorona­virus measures, although the city has halted its outbreak.

Requests by civil society groups to hold protests have been denied for months by authoritie­s citing both the pandemic and last year’s unrest.

Under the “one country, two systems” model agreed on before the city’s return from Britain to China, Hong Kong is supposed to be guaranteed certain liberties until 2047 that are denied to those on the mainland.

The deal fuelled the city’s rise as a world-class financial centre and gave Chinese companies a crucial channel to raise capital.

But in recent years political unrest has swept through the city, something Beijing’s communist rulers are determined to end.

The legislatur­e was blockaded and later trashed by demonstrat­ors during last year’s protests as officials tried to fasttrack an eventually scrapped bill allowing extraditio­ns to the authoritar­ian mainland.

Hong Kong’s pro-Beijing government has vowed to pass the national anthem law as soon as possible.

Beijing has been infuriated by Hong Kongers — especially football fans — booing the national anthem to signal dissatisfa­ction with China.

Wednesday marked the bill’s second reading and the debate is set to continue into next week when it will likely be approved and become law.

Last week Beijing announced plans to enact legislatio­n banning secession, subversion, terrorism and foreign interferen­ce.

That law, which has yet to be published in full, will bypass the legislatur­e and be drawn up directly by Beijing.

One measure announced includes plans to allow China’s security agencies and secret police to openly set up shop in Hong Kong for the first time.

The move has alarmed investors and some western government­s, with the stock market suffering its biggest drop in five years last week. —

 ?? Picture: AFP / ISAAC LAWRENCE ?? CONTROL: Riot police detain a group of people during a protest, against China’s new law proposals, in the Causeway Bay district of Hong Kong on Wednesday.
Picture: AFP / ISAAC LAWRENCE CONTROL: Riot police detain a group of people during a protest, against China’s new law proposals, in the Causeway Bay district of Hong Kong on Wednesday.

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