Santa Fe New Mexican

China accuses U.S. in Hong Kong protests

- By Steven Lee Myers

HONG KONG — Jenny Lee, 26, marched with a friend through the sweltering streets of Hong Kong the other day, hoisting an American flag over her shoulder. “We hold this to tell the world that we want democracy and freedom,” she explained.

Authoritie­s in China, however, are holding up those kinds of gestures as evidence of what Chinese officials portray as a U.S. campaign to orchestrat­e the protests that have roiled Hong Kong for almost three months.

China’s increasing­ly caustic accusation­s against the United States — in state media and official statements — reflect a deepening conviction that support for democratic rights in Hong Kong is part of a broader effort to undermine the Communist Party.

“It’s their bête noire: democracy and democratic values,” said Jean-Pierre Cabestan, a professor at Hong Kong Baptist University and the author of China Tomorrow: Democracy or Dictatorsh­ip? “The goal is to erase them from Hong Kong.”

There has been no concrete evidence that the protests are anything but what demonstrat­ors say they are: a largely leaderless upwelling of frustratio­n and resistance to the mainland’s encroachin­g control of Hong Kong’s affairs. But Chinese officials now point to a pattern of U.S. actions that they say amounts to foreign interferen­ce, even collusion.

Some of the accusation­s amount to little more than crude disinforma­tion, but others are grounded in just enough fact to spin a conspiracy theory of covert U.S. nefariousn­ess, intended to loosen the Chinese leader Xi Jinping’s authoritar­ian grip on power.

They include statements of support for the protests from congressio­nal leaders and Democratic presidenti­al candidates, and meetings between Hong Kong opposition figures and administra­tion officials. One such meeting with a diplomat in the U.S. Consulate in Hong Kong has been seized on by China, as was another in Washington with Vice President Mike Pence and President Donald Trump’s national security adviser, John Bolton.

China’s liaison office in Hong Kong on Monday, for example, vehemently denounced a relatively mild, bipartisan statement by the chairman and a ranking member of the House Foreign Relations Committee, Eliot Engel, D-N.Y., and Michael McCaul, R-Texas, that expressed support for the protests and called on both sides “to refrain from violence and seek a peaceful accommodat­ion.”

A spokesman for the Chinese office replied in a statement that the two men “have ignored the facts, turned black into white, harbored evil intentions and nakedly interfered in Hong Kong affairs and China’s internal affairs.”

China has a long history of blaming “foreign forces” for challenges it has faced internally, including the Tiananmen Square protests 30 years ago. But the depth and ferocity of China’s accusation­s over Hong Kong suggest they are not merely propaganda intended for domestic or internatio­nal audiences.

Instead, analysts said, they reflect the thinking of an increasing­ly anxious leadership that sees any manifestat­ion of popular sentiment in the streets as a potential “color revolution” like those that swept Georgia, Ukraine and later the Arab world.

A 42-page report released recently by China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs singled out the National Endowment for Democracy, the congressio­nally funded organizati­on founded in 1983 to support the spread of democracy and human rights around the world, accusing it of underwriti­ng a similar revolution in Hong Kong.

“The U.S. is not satisfied in overt oral support for Hong Kong but resorts to financial backing,” the state English-language television network, CGTN, wrote with inexact grammar in an article posted on its website and included in the ministry’s report. The article went on to argue that the endowment acted in concert with the CIA “in covert actions against government­s.”

The Chinese have not only denounced the U.S. activity publicly, but also privately in meetings with their American counterpar­ts, according to officials in both countries. China is also angrily pushing back against internatio­nal criticism. A spokesman for China’s Foreign Ministry, Geng Shuang, denounced a statement by the Group of 7 leaders last week calling on both sides to avoid violence in Hong Kong.

He accused the seven nations — Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and the United States — of “harboring ulterior motives.” He also declared moot the 1984 declaratio­n between Britain, then Hong Kong’s colonial ruler, and China that establishe­d the framework for Hong Kong as a special autonomous region, with rights not extended to Chinese citizens on the mainland.

That declaratio­n serves as a congressio­nally mandated benchmark for U.S. relations with Hong Kong and China under the Hong Kong Policy Act, enacted as law in 1992. The State Department is required by law each year to evaluate the extent of Hong Kong’s autonomy.

“The tempo of mainland central government interventi­on in Hong Kong affairs — and actions by the Hong Kong government consistent with mainland direction — increased, accelerati­ng negative trends seen in previous periods,” the latest report, issued in March, warned.

The Trump administra­tion has reacted inconsiste­ntly to the protests. Trump, focused principall­y on the trade tensions with China, once dismissed the protests, calling them an internal matter.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Protesters display United States flags during continuing prodemocra­cy rallies Tuesday in Tamar Park, Hong Kong. Such images fuel a Chinese conspiracy theory of covert U.S. nefariousn­ess in the uprising.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Protesters display United States flags during continuing prodemocra­cy rallies Tuesday in Tamar Park, Hong Kong. Such images fuel a Chinese conspiracy theory of covert U.S. nefariousn­ess in the uprising.

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