Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Hong Kong on edge

Huge protests reflect angst over China’s meddling

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When Britain returned Hong Kong to Chinese control in 1997, freedomlov­ers had a deep sense of foreboding. How long, they wondered, before China’s promises to treat Hong Kong differentl­y from the mainland — to leave its political liberalism intact — would fall by the wayside.

The answer was clear almost from the start.

China’s persistent erosion of political freedom and civil rights in Hong Kong exploded into public view around the world this week, when huge protests erupted over a proposal to allow Hong Kong residents to be extradited to the mainland. The proposed law is unpopular partly because it would give Beijing a formal means of cracking down on dissidents and other undesirabl­es living or taking refuge in the “special administra­tive region.”

But the protests also reflect broader dissatisfa­ction with China’s rat-like gnawing at Hong Kong’s way of life. Hong Kong was supposed to remain largely unchanged during the “one country, two systems” agreement set up to govern the territory for 50 years after Britain’s exit.

But even before the British departed, the Chinese began tightening their grip by proposing laws to control demonstrat­ions and prevent desecratio­n of the new Hong Kong flag. Days before the transfer of power, the incoming leader of Hong Kong, C.H. Tung, responded to protests marking the eighth anniversar­y of the Tiananmen Square massacre by urging the people of Hong Kong to put the “baggage” of Tiananmen behind them.

China wanted Hong Kong’s burgeoning economy and it wanted to recover sovereignt­y over territory ceded to Britain in the 19th century. The communist state never had any

intention of letting Hong Kong remain a beacon of freedom in Asia.

The meddling in Hong Kong only was bound to increase under Chinese President Xi Jinping, a ruler unlike any other since Mao Zedong. Mr. Xi has set himself up to be ruler for life, cracked down on dissidents, sent Muslim Uighurs to concentrat­ion camps, cowed or co-oped other Asian states, and mounted militant foreign and economic policies leading to the current trade war with the U.S. Control of everyone and everything is Mr. Xi’s bottom line.

During Mr. Xi’s tenure — he became president in 2013 —the Chinese puppets in Hong Kong have banned a pro-independen­ce political party and cracked down on pro-democracy activists, including leaders of the 2014 Umbrella Movement. They introduced politicall­y themed education in Hong Hong schools and infused the territory’s gov-ernment with communist yes-men. Even independen­t thought has been tamped down. In 2015, five employees of a controvers­ial Hong Kong bookstore went missing, only to turn up in the hands of Chinese authoritie­s — leaving one to wonder why the Chinese and Hong Kong government­s even consider the proposed extraditio­n law to be necessary.

People in Hong Kong still enjoy more freedom than those in mainland China, and they still mark the anniversar­y of Tiananmen Square, something the residents of Beijing are not allowed to do. But some grimly joke that Chinese tampering with Hong Kong has resulted in a “one country, 1.5 systems” arrangemen­t that’s going to get worse, not better,

How long Mr. Xi will tolerate the Hong Kong protests is unclear. If history is a guide, not long. Sadly, as the U.S. China Economic and Security Review Commission noted last year, Hong Kong is morphing into just another Chinese city.

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