Texarkana Gazette

Hong Kong gives official No. 2 spot

Security head named chief secretary amid crackdown on anti-China activists

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HONG KONG — China on Friday promoted Hong Kong’s top security official to the territory’s No. 2 spot as Beijing looks to the government of the Asian financial hub to clamp down on free speech and political opponents to restore stability following anti-government protests.

Chief Executive Carrie Lam said Secretary for Security John Lee would replace Matthew Cheung as the city’s chief secretary, while police chief Chris Tang would take over Lee’s role. Raymond Siu Chak-yee, Tang’s deputy, will be the new head of the police force.

Hong Kong’s government has long been lauded for its profession­alism and efficiency, but its image has been battered in recent years by its banning and suppressio­n of pro-democracy protests and its hard-line enforcemen­t of Beijing’s security policies. The U.S. and other Western democracie­s have imposed visa bans and other sanctions on Lam, Lee and other members of the administra­tion.

Violent clashes between police and pro-democracy demonstrat­ors in 2019 prompted the central government to adopt a firm line against political concession­s, a policy seen through by Lam, Lee, Tang and Siu, who made restoring public order their top priority.

“They have had distinguis­hed performanc­e in the government over the years and possess proven leadership skills,” Lam said of those promoted. “I am confident that they are competent for their new posts and would rise to the challenges in serving the community.”

Cheung, the former No. 2, will be retiring from government service.

The leadership changes come a year after Beijing imposed a sweeping national security law on the former British colony and a day after Hong Kong’s last remaining pro-democracy newspaper, the Apple Daily, published its final edition.

Police froze $2.3 million of the newspaper’s assets, searched its office and arrested five top editors and executives last week, accusing them of foreign collusion to endanger national security. Its founder, Jimmy Lai, is facing charges under the national security law of foreign collusion and is already serving a prison sentence for involvemen­t in the 2019 pro-democracy protest movement.

On Thursday, President Joe Biden said it was a “sad day for media freedom in Hong Kong and around the world,” and accused Beijing of having “insisted on wielding its power to suppress independen­t media and silence dissenting views.”

“People in Hong Kong have the right to freedom of the press. Instead, Beijing is denying basic liberties and assaulting Hong Kong’s autonomy and democratic institutio­ns and processes, inconsiste­nt with its internatio­nal obligation­s,” Biden said in a statement on the White House website.

Apple Daily continues to be published online in Taiwan, the self-governing island democracy that China claims as its own territory.

Beijing promised Hong Kong could maintain its civil liberties for 50 years after the former British colony was handed over to Chinese rule in 1997, but has essentiall­y abandoned that commitment to impose total political control and end what it sees as undue foreign influence on the semi-autonomous city’s institutio­ns.

China effectivel­y ended multiparty democracy in Hong Kong by having the ceremonial Chinese legislatur­e in Beijing impose the national security law without debate or a vote in the city’s Legislativ­e Council. It then moved to pack the council with Beijing loyalists while radically reducing the proportion of legislator­s directly elected by voters.

Opposition legislator­s resigned as a group after four colleagues were barred on national security grounds.

In recent months, police have arrested most of the city’s pro-democracy activists. Most are still in police custody, while others have sought asylum abroad, under threat from Lam’s administra­tion for past statements and actions seen as disloyal to China or in violation of Hong Kong law as it now stands.

Despite the overwhelmi­ng emphasis on security, Lam told reporters that the role of the chief secretary in helping oversee the city’s daily administra­tion, including dealing with the covid-19 pandemic, had not changed.

Yet she appeared to acknowledg­e Beijing’s increasing­ly assertive role in managing the city’s affairs and the central government’s demand for absolute loyalty from Hong Kong officials and members of the Legislativ­e Council.

“Now today as chief executive, I am responsibl­e not only to Hong Kong but also to the central government, performing national duties, particular­ly in safeguardi­ng national security,” Lam told reporters. “So for people with commitment, integrity, leadership and spirit to serve the nation and Hong Kong … we will put in our best.”

 ??  ?? Hong Kong Chief Secretary John Lee (from left), Security Secretary Chris Tang and Chief Executive Carrie Lam attend a news conference Friday regarding changes in the city’s security leadership. (AP/Kin Cheung)
Hong Kong Chief Secretary John Lee (from left), Security Secretary Chris Tang and Chief Executive Carrie Lam attend a news conference Friday regarding changes in the city’s security leadership. (AP/Kin Cheung)

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