Bangkok Post

Hong Kong’s Lam caves to extraditio­n bill pressure

- JAMES POMFRET GREG TORODE BEN BLANCHARD

With an escalating US trade war, a faltering economy and tensions in the South China Sea vexing her bosses in Beijing, Hong Kong leader Carrie Lam appeared in no mood to compromise on a planned extraditio­n law at recent meetings, according to foreign envoys and business people who met with her.

Some of the people at those meetings in recent weeks pointed to media reports that even Hong Kong’s usually reticent judges were worried about the proposed law which threatened to send people for trial in mainland China for the first time.

But Ms Lam bluntly dismissed concerns about a Chinese justice system that is widely criticised for forced confession­s, arbitrary detentions and one-sided trials.

Worries over the bill’s impact on Hong Kong’s internatio­nal standing as a financial hub with a respected legal system were building in Washington, London and other European capitals, but Ms Lam stressed the need for the extraditio­n law to help solve the murder of a Hong Kong woman in Taiwan.

“She needed a dinghy and she deployed the Titanic,” one diplomat who met Ms Lam this month said, declining to be identified due to the sensitivit­y of the issue.

In numerous public appearance­s after that, Ms Lam was unyielding on the need for the bill, despite huge and sometimes violent street protests including one last Sunday that organisers said drew more than a million people.

Then on Saturday, Ms Lam suddenly announced the bill had been postponed indefinite­ly.

She told a news conference she felt “deep sorrow and regret that the deficienci­es in our work and various other factors have stirred up substantia­l controvers­ies and disputes in society”.

Hong Kong’s self-styled Iron Lady had

cracked, having apparently created an entirely fresh crisis for President Xi Jinping — and the city’s biggest since Britain handed it over to Chinese rule in 1997 with the guarantee its freedoms and autonomy would be preserved.

Clues to the catalyst for the about-face may lie in a reported meeting between Ms Lam and China’s Vice Premier Han Zheng.

According to Hong Kong’s Sing Tao newspaper, Ms Lam had a clandestin­e emergency meeting with Mr Han, a member of the Politburo’s seven-person Standing Committee, China’s top decision-making body, across the border in Shenzhen on Thursday.

The content of the meeting is unknown. Ms Lam on Saturday refused to confirm or deny that it had taken place, despite repeated questions.

Beijing’s grip over Hong Kong has intensifie­d markedly since Mr Xi took power in 2012, and after the city’s protracted 2014 pro-democracy street protests.

He warned in 2017 that any attempts to undermine Chinese sovereignt­y were a “red line” that Beijing would not allow to be crossed — warnings that reinforced his strongman image amongst Hong Kongers.

Many politician­s, diplomats and analysts had not expected Beijing to allow any backdown on the bill, unlike in 2003 when contentiou­s national security laws were scrapped after half a million people took to the streets.

But a source in Beijing with ties to China’s leadership who meets regularly with senior officials, said the Hong Kong government had handled the extraditio­n saga badly.

And while a backdown from Beijing on the bill seemed near inconceiva­ble just a week ago, the violence and escalating unrest forced their hand.

“The outcome doesn’t bear thinking about if this situation wasn’t turned around,” the source said, also declining to be named given the sensitivit­y of the matter.

The source added that Beijing now had severe doubts about Ms Lam’s capabiliti­es. China’s State Council and the central government’s liaison office in Hong Kong did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comments.

China’s Communist Party mouthpiece, the People’s Daily, said in a commentary on Sunday, however, that central authoritie­s expressed “firm support” for Ms Lam and the Hong Kong government in “safeguardi­ng the rule of law and legitimate rights of its residents”. It added that it supported the decision to suspend the extraditio­n bill.

Steve Tsang, a London-based political scientist, said Ms Lam had caused Mr Xi “major embarrassm­ent” at a time that is not helpful for him given trade tensions with the United States, and ahead of a possible meeting with US president Donald Trump at the month’s end at the G20 summit in Japan.

“Xi is not a leader who tolerates failures of officials,” Mr Tsang said.

Retired senior Hong Kong government official Joseph Wong said he was shocked by Beijing’s U-turn, but the situation had become so untenable that he believed it had led to a recalculat­ion by Mr Han after meeting Ms Lam in Shenzhen.

“I suspect ... he (Han) would have had to consider, are we prepared to continue to fire rubber bullets or even real bullets in order to get this through, and what would be the implicatio­ns for the central government internatio­nally, vis-a-vis the US. So that protest was the turning point.”

Ms Lam has refused calls from the opposition and protesters to step down but her ability to govern has been questioned on numerous fronts, including her failure to gauge the pulse in Hong Kong, the broader US-China relationsh­ip, and Taiwan’s refusal to accept any extraditio­n bill, underminin­g her core argument the bill would resolve the Taiwan murder case.

Mr Tsang said he did not expect Ms Lam to last much longer as leader.

“I think Carrie Lam’s days are numbered ... Beijing cannot afford to sack her right away because that would be an indication of weakness,” he said.

Two former post-colonial leaders, Tung Chee-Hwa and Leung Chun-ying, were forced to truncate their time in office from various controvers­ies linked to policies that stoked fears of Chinese encroachme­nt on the city’s freedoms.

For her part, Ms Lam has asked for time so that the bill can be properly deliberate­d. “Give us another chance and we will do this thing well,” she told Saturday’s news conference.

Asked about China’s leaders, she said: “They have confidence in my judgement.”

 ?? AFP ?? A poster bearing an image of Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam is displayed outside the government headquarte­rs after a rally against the controvers­ial extraditio­n bill yesterday.
AFP A poster bearing an image of Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam is displayed outside the government headquarte­rs after a rally against the controvers­ial extraditio­n bill yesterday.

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