Bangkok Post

Lam wants end to talk of autonomy

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HONG KONG: Hong Kong’s leader urged an immediate end to independen­ce debates in the Chinese-ruled global financial hub yesterday, warning that the issue was harming the city’s relationsh­ip with Beijing’s Communist Party leaders.

Insisting that the government did not want to intervene on university campuses against those who have been flying independen­ce banners, Chief Executive Carrie Lam said the campaign was “organised and systematic” rather than simply an issue of freedom of speech.

“This has already deviated from the so-called ‘why aren’t we able to talk about this?’ point of view. It is clearly attacking ‘one country, two systems’ ... and destroying the relationsh­ip between Beijing and Hong Kong,” Ms Lam said.

Ms Lam said the calls “violated” the Basic Law, the constituti­onal document that secured Hong Kong’s broad freedoms of speech and assembly after Britain handed its former colony back to Chinese sovereignt­y in 1997.

While the Basic Law enshrines far broader civil and commercial freedoms than exist in mainland China, some legal experts warn that an independen­ce campaign could break laws against sedition.

Chinese leaders, including President Xi Jinping, have warned that independen­ce discussion­s are a red line that can’t be crossed, saying the city is an inalienabl­e part of China.

 ??  ?? A protester supporting the Occupy Central pro-democracy movement holds a placard outside a district court in Hong Kong.
A protester supporting the Occupy Central pro-democracy movement holds a placard outside a district court in Hong Kong.

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