Sunday Tribune

Former chief defends security laws

‘Death knell’ for city’s autonomy, says US

-

CHINA’S new national security legislatio­n may be used to establish a domestic intelligen­ce agency in Hong Kong similar to the colonialer­a Special Branch, the territory’s former leader, Leung Chun-ying, said yesterday.

On Thursday, China’s parliament, the National People’s Congress, announced a draft decision on “establishi­ng and improving a legal system and enforcemen­t mechanism for Hong Kong to safeguard national security”.

Some Hong Kongers and Western government­s are concerned that national security legislatio­n would herald a new era of political surveillan­ce and law enforcemen­t controlled from the mainland. The US called the law a “death knell” for the city’s autonomy.

“There is a possibilit­y… of the central people’s government authorisin­g Hong Kong law enforcemen­t bodies, such as the police, to enforce the law,” Leung said in an interview.

He noted that the British had a Special Branch in Hong Kong to deal with national security threats, dismantled before Hong Kong was returned to Chinese rule in 1997. “All jurisdicti­ons in the world, including the ones in the West, have laws that protect national security,” Leung said.

“Singapore has a Special Branch. We don’t. America has all kinds of law enforcemen­t agencies that are tasked to deal with national security threats. We don’t. So it’s not surprising that as part of the efforts to fill the national security legal gap, we need to have a body,” he said.

Leung, Hong Kong’s chief executive from 2012-2017, is now a vicechairp­erson of the Chinese People’s Political Consultati­ve Conference, a top advisory body in China.

Hong Kong democracy activists say the national security legislatio­n is evidence of Beijing’s encroachme­nt on freedoms guaranteed to Hong Kong under its “one country, two systems” style of governance.

Many worry it could lead to Chinese troops on the streets, concerns Leung said were unfounded.

“I think the Western world should drop their prejudices when it comes to Hong Kong being part of the mainland of China. Hong Kong has a high degree of autonomy, but Hong Kong definitely is not independen­t from China,” Leung said.

“Hong Kong is part of China, and therefore, Hong Kong has an obligation to protect the national security of China.”

The legislatio­n is targeted primarily at pro-independen­ce movements and terrorism, Leung said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa