San Francisco Chronicle

Xi sternly warns against threats to China’s rule

- By Simon Denyer Simon Denyer is a Washington Post writer.

HONG KONG — Tens of thousands of Hong Kong residents marched through the streets in defense of their cherished freedoms Saturday, in the face of what many see as a growing threat from mainland China, exactly two decades after the handover from British rule.

Earlier in the day, China’s president, Xi Jinping, marked the 20th anniversar­y of the handover with his sternest warning yet to the territory’s people: You can have autonomy, but don’t do anything that challenges the authority of the central government or undermines national sovereignt­y.

Under the terms of the 1997 handover, China promised to grant Hong Kong a high degree of autonomy for at least 50 years, but Xi said it was important to have a “correct understand­ing” of the relationsh­ip between one country and two systems.

“One country is like the roots of a tree,” he told Hong Kong’s elite after swearing in a new chief executive to govern the territory, Carrie Lam. “For a tree to grow and flourish, its roots must run deep and strong. The concept of one country, two systems was advanced first and foremost to realize and uphold national sovereignt­y.”

Many people in Hong Kong accused China of violating the territory’s autonomy in 2015 by seizing five publishers who were putting out gossipy books about the Chinese leadership and allegedly distributi­ng them on the mainland.

Some are also angry that Beijing intervened to disqualify newly elected pro-independen­ce lawmakers who failed to correctly administer the oath of office last year. Many people are worried about a steady erosion of press freedom, and that in a range of areas China is increasing­ly determined to call the shots.

Many also say Hong Kong’s autonomy was again badly distorted in March, with Lam’s election as chief executive. Although the former bureaucrat trailed well behind rival candidate John Tsang in opinion polls, she was chosen by a panel of 1,200 members of the territory’s elite that was packed with proBeijing loyalists.

But Xi made it clear that challenges to Beijing’s authority would not be allowed.

“Any attempt to endanger China’s sovereignt­y and security, challenge the power of the central government and the authority of the Basic Law of the Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region, or use Hong Kong for infiltrati­on or sabotage activities against the mainland, is an act that crosses the red line and is absolutely impermissi­ble,” he said.

The message didn’t appear to go down well on the streets of Hong Kong. Organizers said more than 60,000 people joined Saturday’s annual march, which they said was meant to deliver a message to the Chinese president.

“He’s threatenin­g Hong Kong’s people, saying he has the power to make us do what he wants,” said student Anson Woo, 19. “But I still have hope. Seeing all the people around me today, the people of Hong Kong are still fighting for what we value.”

A poll by the Chinese University of Hong Kong showed residents attach even greater importance to judicial independen­ce and freedom of the press than to economic developmen­t.

“We have to take the chance to express our views while we still can,” student Chan Sui Yan, 15, said. “They say it is one country, two systems, but right now we are losing a lot of the rights we value.”

Many protesters called for the release of Nobel laureate and democracy icon Liu Xiabo, imprisoned in China since 2008 and last week taken to a hospital under close guard for treatment of advanced liver cancer.

 ?? Vincent Yu / Associated Press ?? Protesters carry an image of detained Chinese Nobel Peace laureate Liu Xiabo as they march during the annual pro-democracy demonstrat­ion in Hong Kong. Many say China is violating Hong Kong’s autonomy.
Vincent Yu / Associated Press Protesters carry an image of detained Chinese Nobel Peace laureate Liu Xiabo as they march during the annual pro-democracy demonstrat­ion in Hong Kong. Many say China is violating Hong Kong’s autonomy.

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