Yuma Sun

Biden right to help Hong Kong refugees in US

Safe-haven order protects thousands at risk due to pro-democracy activism

- Unsigned editorials represent the viewpoint of this newspaper rather than an individual. Columns and letters to the editor represent the viewpoints of the persons writing them and do not necessaril­y represent the views of the Yuma Sun.

The Wall Street Journal on Biden providing haven status to Hong Kong citizens in the U.S.

Bravo to the Biden Administra­tion, which on

Jan. 26 extended temporary safe haven status for another two years to Hong Kong citizens currently in the U.S. The decision will protect thousands of residents of the once autonomous city where dissent and support for democracy have been criminaliz­ed.

The U.S. first offered safety to Hong Kongers in August 2021, with some 5,600 who were already here eligible. President Biden said on Jan. 26 that Beijing “has continued its assault on Hong Kong’s autonomy, underminin­g its remaining democratic processes and institutio­ns, imposing limits on academic freedom, and cracking down on freedom of the press.”

He said “at least 150 opposition politician­s, activists, and protesters” have been arrested under the national-security law that carries a maximum sentence of life in prison, and more than 10,000 others have been arrested “in connection with anti-government protests.”

Huen Lam, a spokespers­on for the Hong Kong Democracy Council, a Washington, D.C., nonprofit, is among those at risk. “I have participat­ed in a lot of political work here in the U.S., all of which are considered as breaking the National Security Law,” she told us in an email, so “if I were to go back to Hong Kong now, I would be arrested and jailed.”

Without an extension of the safe-haven order, Hong Kong citizens would have had to seek another form of immigratio­n protection to remain in the U.S. But it would have been difficult for many former pro-democracy protesters to gather sufficient evidence to bolster an asylum claim.

Participan­ts in the 2019 democracy protests often covered their faces to hide from the Communist Party’s facial-recognitio­n technology, but that now makes it hard to establish their role in the demonstrat­ions. After Beijing imposed the national-security law, many Hong Kong residents deleted social-media posts and other evidence of pro-democracy activism.

Congress can help by providing a permanent refuge for Hong Kong citizens who are already in the U.S. America is enriched by those who know what it’s like to risk everything for freedom and the rule of law.

This editorial originally appeared in the Wall Street Journal, and is reprinted here via the Associated Press. Read more online at : https://www.wsj. com

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