China criticizes Britain for 'shameless'
comments on Hong Kong
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[July 03, 2019]
By Ben Blanchard
BEIJING (Reuters) - China on Wednesday
denounced British Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt as "shameless", saying
it had made a diplomatic complaint to London after he warned of
consequences if China neglected commitments made when it took back Hong
Kong in 1997.
China has stepped up a war of words with Hong Kong's former colonial
ruler following mass protests there against a now suspended bill that
would allow extradition to mainland China.
"To say that the freedoms of Hong Kong residents is something Britain
strived for is simply shameless," Foreign Ministry spokesman Geng Shuang
told a news briefing.
"I would like to ask Mr. Hunt, during the British colonial era in Hong
Kong, was there any democracy to speak of? Hong Kongers didn't even have
the right to protest."
Only after Hong Kong's return to China did its people got an
"unprecedented" guarantee about democracy and freedom, he said.
Britain's responsibilities to Hong Kong under the Sino-British Joint
Declaration have ended, and Hong Kong is purely an internal matter for
China, Geng added, repeating earlier remarks.
The comments followed remarks by Hunt to Reuters on Monday, condemning
violence on both sides and warning of consequences if China neglected
commitments to allow freedoms to Hong Kong not enjoyed in mainland
China, including the right to protest.
Late on Monday, hundreds of protesters in the former British colony had
besieged, and broken into, the legislature after a demonstration marking
the anniversary of return to Chinese rule.
China called the violence an "undisguised challenge" to the "one
country, two systems" model under which Hong Kong has been ruled for 22
years.
The turbulence in Hong Kong was triggered by an extradition bill
opponents say will undermine Hong Kong's much-cherished rule of law and
give Beijing powers to prosecute activists in mainland courts, which are
controlled by the Communist Party.
Hunt, who is seeking to become Britain's next prime minister, has made
no attempt to correct his mistakes in talking about Hong Kong and has
"continued to wag his tongue too freely" on the issue, Geng said.
Had Britain's parliament been surrounded and attacked, would authorities
have stood by and done nothing, he asked.
"Does he think that the British police's handling of the August, 2011
riots in London was repression?" Geng asked, referring to rioting in
London that year.
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Riot police clear the streets outside the Legislative Council
building, after protesters stormed the building on the anniversary
of Hong Kong's handover to China, in Hong Kong, China July 2, 2019.
REUTERS/Thomas Peter/File Photo
"We hope that Britain, especially Mr. Hunt, does not overestimate
its abilities and wantonly interfere in Hong Kong matters. This is
destined to be futile," he said.
China has lodged "stern representations" with Britain both in
Beijing and London about Hunt's remarks, he added.
The two countries had been seeking to reset ties after a row over
the disputed South China Sea last year, with Chinese Vice Premier Hu
Chunhua visiting London last month to oversee the start of a link
between its stock exchange and that of Shanghai.
Confrontation and lawlessness in Hong Kong could damage its
reputation as an international business hub and seriously hurt its
economy, China's top newspaper, the People's Daily, said in an
editorial.
"It will not only serve no purpose, but will also severely hinder
economic and social development," the ruling Communist Party's
official paper said, denouncing what it called artificially created
division and opposition.
Hong Kong, facing pressure from changes in the world economy and
intensifying competition, could not "bear turbulence and internal
friction", it added.
China has blamed Western countries, particularly the United States
and Hong Kong's former colonial master Britain, for offering succour
to the protests.
In an editorial, the official China Daily, an English-language
newspaper Beijing often uses to send its message to the world,
condemned "outside agitations".
"What has also been notable is the hypocrisy of some Western
governments - the United States and United Kingdom most prominently
- which have called for a stop to the violence, as if they have had
nothing to do with it," the paper said.
"But, looking back at the whole protest saga, they have been deeply
involved in fuelling it since its inception."
(Reporting by Ben Blanchard; Additional reporting by David Stanway
in SHANGHAI; Editing by Paul Tait and Clarence Fernandez)
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