Los Angeles Times

Hong Kong shocked by Xi’s clampdown

Security law signals China’s intent to crush dissent in the territory and risks deepening acrimony with U.S.

- By Shashank Bengali, Alice Su and David Pierson Su reported from Shanghai, and Bengali and Pierson from Singapore.

SHANGHAI — With his country’s COVID-19 outbreak waning, nationalis­m rising at home and his antagonist­s in the Trump administra­tion preoccupie­d by the pandemic and electionye­ar politics, Chinese leader Xi Jinping is boldly moving to crush a potent obstacle to his authority.

By imposing a new national security law on Hong Kong, Xi’s Communist Party signaled a determinat­ion to squelch a fierce anti-China protest movement — and demolish the long-standing firewall protecting the territory’s human rights and freedoms from interferen­ce by the authoritar­ian mainland government.

For Xi, the most powerful Chinese leader in decades, the strategy is yet another show of authority as he seeks to overcome accusation­s of mishandlin­g the early days of the coronaviru­s outbreak late last year. After getting the virus under control, but still dealing with its economic fallout, another summer of chaotic, headline-grabbing protests in Hong Kong would undermine China’s efforts to portray itself as a global leader.

It is a startling moment playing out against a resurgence of Chinese nationalis­m and a confidence by Beijing that — despite diplomatic consequenc­es — it can assert its influence over a territory that for years has challenged its vision of domestic harmony.

The legislatio­n would grant authoritie­s broad powers to crack down on dissent and appears aimed at stopping fresh demonstrat­ions as Hong Kong emerges from a months-long coronaviru­s lockdown. Critics call it a power grab that ends the autonomy that

China promised Hong Kong would enjoy for at least 50 years when it took back the territory from Britain in 1997.

“The intensific­ation of Beijing’s crackdown on Hong Kong is a sign that when the Chinese Communist Party feels its core interests are threatened, it is willing to take steps that were previously seen as unthinkabl­e,” said Benjamin Bland, research fellow at the Lowy Institute in Australia and author of “Generation HK: Seeking Identity in China’s Shadow.”

The decision is another mark of China’s deteriorat­ing relationsh­ip with the U.S., one that many fear is edging toward cold war.

As the Trump administra­tion and Chinese officials trade misinforma­tion and insults over the origins of COVID-19, talks on resolving a bitter trade dispute have collapsed. U.S. law exempts Hong Kong from tariffs on Chinese goods imposed during the trade war, but last year, in support of the protests, the U.S. introduced a provision that would revoke Hong Kong’s special trade status if it loses its autonomy from mainland China.

U.S. lawmakers from both parties have criticized the security law and called on the Trump administra­tion to hold Beijing accountabl­e. Secretary of State Michael R. Pompeo, who has delayed a decision on Hong Kong’s status, condemned the law Friday, calling it “a death knell for the high degree of autonomy Beijing promised for Hong Kong.”

“This will be a test of what the U.S. policy is now toward Hong Kong and toward containing China,” said Eliza Lee, a professor of politics at Hong Kong University. “Within Hong Kong there are people who are looking up and waiting for the U.S. to respond.”

But analysts say that Xi is gambling that Trump won’t enact sanctions or introduce new tariffs against China that could intensify the trade war and risk damaging an already weak U.S. economy months before he seeks reelection.

“The U.S. will absolutely talk tough on China — and there will likely be skirmishes for the next six months — but Trump will think twice before taking any action against China, which dims the prospects for a V-shaped economic recovery,” said Steven Okun, a Singapore-based senior advisor with McLarty Associates, a consulting company.

Beijing’s strategy seemed to be long in the making, beginning soon after street protests erupted in Hong Kong a year ago in response to an extraditio­n bill and evolved into a broader anti-China movement.

In February, Xi appointed several hard-line officials to the department­s managing Hong Kong affairs. Last month, with the coronaviru­s outbreak silencing protests, Hong Kong authoritie­s arrested more than a dozen prominent critics of China.

Still, Beijing’s decision stunned many when it was reported on Thursday at the beginning of the Communist Party’s National People’s Congress.

“Hong Kong is in a state of shock,” said Willy Lam, a political analyst at the Chinese University of Hong Kong.

A draft of the decision published Friday authorizes Beijing to insert the new national security laws directly into the Basic Law, Hong Kong’s quasi-constituti­on, circumvent­ing the local government. It calls for Chinese security institutio­ns — which have long maintained a covert presence in Hong Kong — to open branches inside the territory and for Hong Kong’s judiciary, which until now has been relatively independen­t, to punish “actions that harm national security.”

Analysts said the erosion of legal protection­s could accelerate the flight of affluent and middle-class Hong Kong families to the West and drive more businesses out of the global financial center. Many foreign companies began to shift personnel and capital to Singapore, Taiwan and elsewhere after last summer’s protests.

Lam said Hong Kong would pay an economic price for the law because businesses rely on independen­t courts.

“The Chinese economy is not doing very well and this will have a detrimenta­l impact on business in Hong Kong,” Lam said. “But for Xi Jinping, law and order is more important than business. He would rather solve the law-and-order problem first and pacify the foreign businesspe­ople later on.”

The law also probably erases whatever hope was left for Taiwan embracing a formal return to China under the “one country, two systems” arrangemen­t that supposedly protected Hong Kong’s autonomy under Chinese rule. Taiwan politician­s have condemned the security law.

“The firewall between Hong Kong and China’s draconian laws and institutio­ns is being removed. The Chinese government wants to burn the people of Hong Kong,” said Eric Lai, spokesman for the Civil Human Rights Front, a coalition that helped organize many of last year’s major marches.

Lai vowed that demonstrat­ions would continue but gave no details. Hong Kong authoritie­s have banned public gatherings of more than eight people until at least June 4 as a social distancing measure.

But many said the protesters would not give up easily — foreshadow­ing another summer of conflict.

“People are more frustrated now but more angry,” said Charles Mok, an opposition lawmaker. “Some will leave. Those who can’t leave, will they give up? Not so easily. That is the one lesson learned over the last 12 months. No one can change that.”

 ?? Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times ?? OFFICERS apprehend a Hong Kong protester in September. New legislatio­n empowers authoritie­s to crack down on dissent and appears aimed at stopping a fresh round of protests as the region emerges from lockdown.
Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times OFFICERS apprehend a Hong Kong protester in September. New legislatio­n empowers authoritie­s to crack down on dissent and appears aimed at stopping a fresh round of protests as the region emerges from lockdown.

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