The National - News

Even as the whole world may subscribe to it, what does ‘One China’ really mean?

- SHOLTO BYRNES Sholto Byrnes is a commentato­r and consultant in Kuala Lumpur

You do not have to read the internal report presented last month to Chinese leadership on the subject to know that critical sentiment towards China is on the rise worldwide. Blaming the country for the spread of the coronaviru­s is only the latest issue to be weaponised. Two older ones have very much come back to the fore in recent days.

The first concerns Hong Kong. The announceme­nt that Beijing’s National People’s Congress is going to pass national security legislatio­n for the Special Autonomous Region, because the city’s own Legislativ­e Council (also known as the LegCo) cannot be relied upon to do so, has been greeted with protests from certain quarters.

Under Hong Kong’s mini-constituti­on, the Basic Law, the LegCo is obliged to pass such legislatio­n, but has shied away from it since a 2003 attempt led to half a million people taking to the streets in protest.

This explanatio­n cuts no ice with critics who claim the new laws would mean the end of Hong Kong as it has hitherto been known, and that the “one country, two systems” principle which was supposed to guarantee the former British colony a high degree of autonomy for 50 years after the 1997 handover has been undermined.

Under the new laws, mainland security agencies would be stationed in Hong Kong, and it is clear that Beijing is unwilling to tolerate large-scale public demonstrat­ions – like those the region went through last year – let alone a burgeoning independen­ce movement.

That is not to the liking of the British foreign secretary Dominic Raab, who issued a statement along with his Australian and Canadian counterpar­ts, Marise Payne and Francois-Philippe Champagne, expressing their “deep concern” about the legislatio­n, which they said would be contrary to the legally binding Sino-British Joint Declaratio­n of 1984 that both countries signed.

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo went further. He called the new law a “disastrous proposal”, and hinted strongly that Hong Kong could lose its preferenti­al trade status with the US as a result.

Mr Pompeo has also been raising another long-standing issue: China’s relationsh­ip with Taiwan. He sent a message to be read out at the inaugurati­on of Taiwan’s re-elected president, Tsai Ing-wen. This was an unpreceden­ted move by a Secretary of State and highly provocativ­e, given that Beijing considers the island to be a renegade province that must be reunited with the mainland.

But the lack of diplomatic finesse is born of a view seemingly prevalent in many political circles of the West today: that China is, as the American political scientist Francis Fukuyama puts it, “a hostile power”.

Missing in all of this is any attempt to understand China’s point of view, let alone the perspectiv­e of a more nationalis­tic China. For why should the Chinese be denied the right to a pride in their homeland?

Which other country would tolerate being threatened with trade sanctions for enacting laws within its own borders – which is what it will be doing in Hong Kong? And which other country would tolerate the leader of a province declaring independen­ce, which is what Ms Tsai has effectivel­y done, and then being congratula­ted by a superpower?

It should be remembered that under the “One China” concept, to which nearly the whole world officially subscribes, there is only one government of China. This is why so few countries have full diplomatic relations with Taiwan. And however much sympathy one may have with people in Taiwan who do not wish to rejoin the mainland, the territoria­l integrity of states is a key principle in internatio­nal law, and one that has been defended by countries such as Spain, which is still trying to prosecute the Catalan independen­ce leader Carles Puigdemont.

With Hong Kong, it is true that the Sino-British Joint Declaratio­n is a treaty registered at the UN. But nearly three years ago a Chinese foreign ministry official described it bluntly as “a historical document” that “no longer has any realistic meaning”, and the moral case for Britain as the former colonial power to have any say over the future of an island and its neighbouri­ng territorie­s that it took from China with menaces over the 19th century is thin to non-existent.

Those were among the “unequal treaties” with foreign powers that China was forced to sign during what it calls its “century of humiliatio­n”. Interestin­gly, a commentary on the state-run CGTN website recently referenced these, stating that “Britain, the US, Canada and Australia believe they are the guardians and that they have a bigger stake in what is part of China, than China itself. The logic and attitudes concerning the Sino-British Joint Declaratio­n still mirror the unequal treaties of old.”

Were they not so blinded by their criticism of Beijing’s Communist leadership, even China’s detractors would have to concede that there is something in this. They, and others, need to acknowledg­e China’s sense of itself, its history and its rights to sovereignt­y over its own lands.

For what, after all, is their ultimate goal? Their hopes were that, as China liberalise­d economical­ly, a similar opening-up would happen in the political sphere. That is looking ever more unlikely under President Xi. But if it did, as Professor Fukuyama has admitted, “a more liberal China could easily be more nationalis­tic.”

So either way, railing or threatenin­g or being unnecessar­ily provocativ­e to China over Hong Kong or Taiwan will have little use, beyond escalating already worryingly high tensions.

Beijing will not give an inch, and it would probably be politicall­y suicidal for any leader to do so. You don’t have to agree with China’s positions on these two issues.

To ignore them or pretend they don’t have strong support at home, however, is not statecraft but stupidity. And we have enough of that in internatio­nal politics at the moment as it is.

Being provocativ­e to China over Hong Kong or Taiwan will have little use beyond escalating tensions

 ?? Bloomberg ?? A protest in the Wan Chai district in Hong Kong this week
Bloomberg A protest in the Wan Chai district in Hong Kong this week
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