The Citizen (KZN)

‘You’re breaching new security law’

POLLS: CHINA ACCUSES HONG KONG OF ‘PROVOCATIO­N’

- Hong Kong

Push to control and paralyse chamber ‘subverts state power’.

China has accused Hong Kong democracy activists of trying to start a revolution as it warned some campaignin­g for recent primaries may have breached a tough new security law it imposed on the city.

The bellicose comments by the liaison office, which represents China’s government in the semi-autonomous city, dramatical­ly heighten the risk of prosecutio­n for opposition parties and leading figures.

More than 600 000 Hong Kongers turned out over the weekend to choose candidates for upcoming legislativ­e elections, despite warnings from government officials that the exercise could breach Beijing’s sweeping new law.

Polls for the city’s partially elected legislatur­e are due to take place in September.

Pro-democracy parties are keen to use public anger towards Beijing’s increasing­ly authoritar­ian rule to win a majority within a chamber that has always been weighted in favour of pro-establishm­ent parties.

Control could give them a greater ability to stall budgets and legislatio­n, one of the few tactics left open to the opposition camp.

But the liaison office described the primaries as “a serious provocatio­n against the current election system”.

It said campaignin­g that pushed to take control of and paralyse the chamber is a breach of Article 22 of the security law.

Article 22 targets “subverting state power”. It outlaws “serious interferen­ce and obstructio­n” of the central and Hong Kong government­s, or any act that causes them to be “unable to perform their functions normally”.

The liaison office also singled out Benny Tai, a prominent democracy activist who played a leading role in organising the primary. “The goal of the Benny Tai gang and the opposition camp is to seize power to govern Hong Kong, with a vain attempt to launch a Hong Kong version of a ‘colour revolution’,” the office said.

In authoritar­ian Communist China, the term colour revolution has frequently been used by both the government and state media to describe an illegitima­te revolution backed by hidden forces.

Tai, a law professor, has previously been jailed for his involvemen­t in peaceful pro-democracy protests in 2014.

Yesterday, the Apple Daily newspaper published a column by Tai in which he hailed the primaries.

“Threats from the powerful did not deter tens of thousands of citizens from coming out and casting a ballot,” he wrote. – AFP

Goal of the Benny Tai gang is to seize power

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