Hong Kong facing worst crisis since handover: senior China official
Send a link to a friend
[August 07, 2019]
By Farah Master and James Pomfret
HONG KONG (Reuters) - Hong Kong is facing
its worst crisis since it returned from British to Chinese rule in 1997,
the head of China's Hong Kong and Macau Affairs office said on
Wednesday, as more anti-government protests rocked the Asian financial
hub.
"Hong Kong's crisis ... has continued for 60 days, and is getting worse
and worse," Zhang Xiaoming, one of the most senior Chinese officials
overseeing Hong Kong affairs, said during a meeting in the southern
Chinese city of Shenzhen.
"Violent activities are intensifying and the impact on society is
spreading wider. It can be said that Hong Kong is now facing the most
severe situation since its handover," he said.
Hong Kong has faced months of sometimes violent protests that began with
opposition to a now-suspended extradition law and which have evolved
into a direct challenge to the government of embattled leader Carrie Lam
and calls for full democracy.
Hong Kong's protests, which continued on Wednesday, pose a major
challenge to Chinese President Xi Jinping who is grappling with a trade
war with the United States and a slowing economy.
Zhang held a forum on Wednesday to discuss the political crisis in Hong
Kong which included Hong Kong delegates to China's parliament, the
National People's Congress and China's main consultative body, the CPPCC.
No opposition democratic figures or protest representatives were
invited.
Speaking after the meeting, several attendees said Zhang cited speeches
by former Chinese paramount leader Deng Xiaoping in 1984 and 1987 in
which he said if "turmoil" occurs in Hong Kong, "the central government
must intervene".
No specific mention, however, was made of deploying the People's
Liberation Army (PLA), which has a garrison in Hong Kong, to quell the
unrest, with Zhang cited as saying Beijing remained confident in the
Hong Kong government and local police.
Elsie Leung, a former justice secretary, said she felt that even if the
PLA were deployed it would not conflict with Hong Kong's "one country,
two systems" by which it has been governed since 1997. "One country, two
systems would continue," she said.
In China's sharpest rebuke yet of the protesters, the government warned
them on Tuesday not to "play with fire" and called on Hong Kong citizens
to protect their homeland.
The Global Times, a Chinese tabloid published by the Communist Party's
People's Daily, showed a video on its official Twitter feed of thousands
of police officers taking part in an anti-riot training drill in
Shenzhen, which borders Hong Kong.
The protests have drawn millions onto the streets in opposition to an
extradition bill that would see suspects tried in mainland courts
controlled by the Communist Party. Many feared it would undermine Hong
Kong's independent judiciary and was another step toward full mainland
control of Hong Kong.
[to top of second column]
|
Lawyers and workers in Hong Kong's legal sector gather outside the
Department of Justice during a protest in Hong Kong, China August 7,
2019. REUTERS/Thomas Peter
Several thousand Hong Kong lawyers dressed in black, marched in
silence on Wednesday to call on the government to safeguard the
independence of the city's department of justice.
The city's lawyers fear the justice department's prosecutions of
arrested protesters are taking on an increasingly political slant
with over 500 arrests, many charged with rioting, an offense that
carries a 10-year jail term.
A female lawyer who declined to be named said she was marching "to
make sure the government knows that within the legal sector, we will
not allow judicial independence to be compromised by politics or
pressure from the Chinese government".
A group of unidentified government prosecutors published an open
letter last week accusing Secretary of Justice Teresa Cheng of
putting politics above legal principles.
"All we want is justice and all we want is consistency," said
prominent lawyer Kevin Yam, who also protested. "We don't want to
see thugs get away while the best of our youth get prosecuted. We
uphold the rule of law and we ask for justice."
Protesters are demanding a complete withdrawal of the extradition
bill, an independent inquiry into the crisis, an investigation into
what they say is excessive use of force by police, and for Lam to
step down.
A brazen attack by an armed mob on protesters at a train station in
Yuen Long on the night of July 21 that left 45 people injured, has
so far seen 23 people arrested for the relatively light charge of
unlawful assembly. Protesters say police were slow to protect them.
Police fired tear gas in Sham Shui Po late on Tuesday, as protesters
gathered outside a police station to demand the release of Keith
Fong, a student union leader from Baptist University, who they say
was unlawfully arrested by several plain-clothes police for buying
laser pointers on the grounds that he possessed offensive weapons.
Protesters have sometimes aimed lasers, which are widely available
in shops, at police during recent clashes.
(Reporting By Anne Marie Roantree, Greg Torode, Donny Kwok, Noah Sin
and Sijia Jiang; Editing by Michael Perry and Paul Tait)
[© 2019 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2019 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |