Bangkok Post

UK ‘will pay’ for ending extraditio­n

Beijing calls move blatant interferen­ce

- KYODO

BEIJING: China yesterday blasted Britain’s decision to suspend its extraditio­n treaty with Hong Kong over Beijing’s recent imposition of a sweeping national security law on the territory.

Britain “blatantly interfered in China’s internal affairs in an attempt to disrupt the implementa­tion” of the new law, a spokespers­on at the Chinese Embassy in London said in remarks posted on the embassy’s website. “The Chinese side strongly condemns and firmly opposes this.”

Britain “will bear the consequenc­es if it insists on going down the wrong road”, the spokespers­on added.

Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab told parliament on Monday that given its deep concerns about the national security law imposed on its former colony, the British government is suspending its extraditio­n treaty with Hong Kong “immediatel­y and indefinite­ly”.

The secretary also said that given the role Beijing has now assumed for the “internal security” of Hong Kong under the new law, the government is also extending to Hong Kong the arms embargo that has applied to China since 1989.

Mr Raab said that while Britain wants to work with China, the two measures are a “reasonable and proportion­ate response” to China’s failure to live up to internatio­nal obligation­s.

He added that the extraditio­n treaty is suspended because the law’s imposition has “significan­tly changed key assumption­s underpinni­ng our extraditio­n treaty arrangemen­ts with Hong Kong”.

Echoing Beijing’s stance on the matter, the Hong Kong government said yesterday that it strongly objects to Britain’s “gross interferen­ce” in China’s internal affairs and its move to allow criminals to evade justice.

“The UK’s unilateral suspension of the agreement on [the] surrender of fugitive offenders with Hong Kong is for political purposes,” a government spokesman said in a statement.

“The decision shines a spotlight on the real possibilit­y that the UK will become a haven for fugitives wanted by Hong Kong who are trying to escape legal responsibi­lity.”

Britain followed Australia and

Canada in suspending extraditio­n treaties with Hong Kong in response to the national security legislatio­n.

The national security law, imposed on Hong Kong at the end of last month, outlaws what it defines as acts of secession, subversion, terrorism and collusion with foreign forces. It also allows suspects to be transferre­d to mainland China for prosecutio­n.

Western government­s have criticised the legislatio­n as underminin­g the high degree of autonomy Beijing promised for the former British colony for 50 years upon its return to Chinese rule in 1997.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Members of a pro-government group protest outside the British Consulate-General in Hong Kong on Monday.
REUTERS Members of a pro-government group protest outside the British Consulate-General in Hong Kong on Monday.

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