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Hong Kong: China says opposition walkout is open challenge

International Desk
12 Nov 2020 14:56:03 | Update: 12 Nov 2020 15:30:37
Hong Kong: China says opposition walkout is open challenge

China's government has condemned the mass resignation of most of Hong Kong's opposition as a "farce" and an "open challenge" to its authority.

On Wednesday, 15 opposition members announced their resignation in solidarity with four fellow lawmakers who had been dismissed.

Beijing said the four were deemed a threat to national security.

But many see it as further restricting Hong Kong's rights, including freedom of speech, which Beijing denies.

It has been widely criticised as a violation of the territory's supposed autonomy under the one "country, two systems" agreement, with the US calling it a move towards "one party dictatorship".

China's Hong Kong and Macau Affairs Office on Thursday condemned the mass resignation as "an open challenge" against the Chinese government's authority and the Basic Law, Hong Kong's mini-constitution.

It also said the move showed their "stance of stubborn resistance" against the central government.

"If these lawmakers hope to make use of their resignation to provoke radical opposition and beg for foreign interference, they have miscalculated," a spokesperson said.

What led to this?

On Wednesday, a resolution passed by Beijing said lawmakers should be disqualified if they support Hong Kong independence, refuse to acknowledge China's sovereignty, ask foreign forces to interfere in the city's affairs, or in other ways threaten national security.

Immediately afterwards, Hong Kong dismissed four opposition members of the city's Legislative Council (LegCo) under the rules of the new resolution.

Later on Wednesday, another 15 pro-democracy lawmakers announced they would resign en masse in solidarity.

On Thursday, they were absent from their seats in the LegCo.

One of the lawmakers who resigned, Wu Chi-wai, told reporters the developments made it clear that Beijing was undermining Hong Kong's autonomy.

"I can only say that, it is the [plot] that the Beijing government has been drawing for a long time and today they get to the end of the story and tell the whole world that 'one country, two systems' has come to an end," he said.

He also vowed that "we cannot give up" even if "to get back democracy from the authoritative type of government, it takes a long time, maybe generations, but we cannot give up".

The city's 70-seat legislature has 21 opposition members, usually referred to as non-establishment. Only two of those will now remain in the parliament.

Why were the four dismissed?

City officials say the four lawmakers removed on Wednesday had already been disqualified from running in the next election, originally scheduled for September 2020 but postponed to next year.

Beijing and Hong Kong officials have not given details on how exactly the four men had contravened the rules.

Alvin Yeung: Leader of the pro-democracy Civic party and a practising barrister. He was banned from taking part in this year's election after because he signed of a joint letter to US senators calling for sanctions on Hong Kong

Dennis Kwok: The barrister is a founding member of the Civic Party. He was earlier accused of paralysing LegCo by using filibustering tactics, in a move the Chinese Central Government in Hong Kong called "malicious". He was banned from elections after signing the sanctions letter

Kenneth Leung: The senior tax consultant is a member of the pro-democracy parliamentary group, the Professionals Guild. According to news site SCMP, officials barred him from the elections after accusing him of indirectly appealing to the US government for sanctions

Kwok Ka-ki: The Civic Party member was also barred from contesting in this year's elections. However, the urologist did not sign the joint letter or attend a trip to the US. Officials said he had a "purported intention to call on foreign powers to sanction Hong Kong", according to SCMP

What does this mean for Hong Kong?

The developments underscore the rapid expansion of Beijing's influence in the territory, pushing for loyalty from all levels of power.

Observers say that without the pro-democracy lawmakers, there will be no effective opposition and LegCo reduced to a rubberstamp parliament.

Earlier this month, authorities already arrested several other pro-democracy legislators over scuffles during a LegCo meeting in May.

The city's leader is already chosen by pro-Beijing committees, and only half of the LegCo seats directly elected.

A Special Administrative Region since its return from Britain in 1997, Hong Kong was to have its own legal system, multiple political parties, and rights including freedom of assembly and free speech for 50 years.

But the new security law for the city passed in response to months of pro-democracy protests criminalised "secession, subversion and collusion with foreign forces".

Beijing said the law would return stability to the territory, but critics said it effectively curtailed freedom of speech and protest.

What has been the reaction?

The US has warned it will impose further sanctions against China targeting those responsible for extinguishing Hong Kong's freedom.

"'One country, two systems' is now merely a fig leaf covering for the Chinese Communist Party's expanding one party dictatorship in Hong Kong," US national security adviser Robert O'Brien said.

UK Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab said the Chinese resolution would "harass, stifle and disqualify democratic opposition tarnishes China's international reputation and undermines Hong Kong's long-term stability."

Germany, current holder of the EU's rotating presidency, and Australia have also condemned the firings.

But Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin on Wednesday said the disqualification of the four lawmakers was "rational, reasonable and in line with the constitution and laws".

"This was a necessary requirement for adhering to and improving on 'one country, two systems', implementing Hong Kong's Basic Law, as well as Hong Kong's National Security Law," he said at a news conference in Beijing.

 

(Source: BBC)

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