Special Report: Hong Kong's top cop overshadows embattled leader Lam as
China cracks down
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[July 08, 2020]
By Greg Torode, James Pomfret and David Lague
HONG KONG (Reuters) - As Hong Kong fretted
over tough new national security legislation Beijing was fashioning
earlier this year, Chris Tang enthusiastically supported the move. It
was needed, Hong Kong's combative police chief said, to extinguish calls
for the city's independence and restore order.
Last week he got his wish. Just an hour before the 23rd anniversary of
Hong Kong's handover to China on July 1, the ruling Communist Party
imposed the law, in the process arming Tang with a range of powerful
tools to quell popular dissent. The effect was immediate.
Within 24 hours, Tang's officers had arrested 10 people under the new
law along with about 360 others suspected of existing offenses as
protests erupted over Beijing's move. China's most open and
free-wheeling city began to clam up. Political groups disbanded.
Activists fled overseas. Shops ripped down posters supporting the
protests that convulsed the city last year. And public libraries pulled
books written by some pro-democracy authors from their shelves.
The sweeping legislation, which punishes crimes related to secession,
subversion, terrorism and collusion with foreign forces, expands the
powers of Tang and his officers. Their new tools will include enhanced
powers of searching premises and electronic devices, freezing or
confiscating assets and demanding people and groups provide information.
With the approval of Hong Kong's political leader, rather than its
courts, police will be able to conduct electronic surveillance and
intercept the communications of an individual suspected of endangering
national security. And Tang's police aren't operating alone: Mainland
China's feared secret police are now operating inside the city.
With Beijing stepping in to crush Hong Kong's democracy movement, Chris
Tang has become the dominant figure in a city administration whose top
priority now is regaining control. Tang will be responsible for a new
police unit - the Special National Security Unit - that will tackle
threats to national security, run by one of his deputies. He will also
sit on a new Hong Kong body, supervised by mainland officials, that will
coordinate actions against national security threats.
Bolstered by the new law, the 55-year-old Tang is moving to douse any
efforts to revive a movement that began as a protest against an
extradition bill and morphed into a call for greater democracy, posing
the biggest popular challenge to the Chinese Communist Party since the
1989 Tiananmen uprising. With his aggressive tactics, he is
overshadowing the city's embattled political leader, Chief Executive
Carrie Lam. She ignited the crisis last year with proposed laws that
would have allowed extradition of people from Hong Kong to the mainland
for trial. She later withdrew the bill under intense pressure from the
street, battering her own authority and delivering a blow to her chief
backer, Chinese leader Xi Jinping.
"China won't take any chances anymore with national security, and Chris
Tang is someone they trust," a senior police source, who deals regularly
with Tang, told Reuters ahead of the new law being imposed.
Along with Tang, Secretary for Security John Lee and Secretary for
Justice Teresa Cheng have emerged as key local players in Beijing's
imposition of a harsher law-and-order regimen in Hong Kong. The three
joined Lam when she visited the Chinese capital last month to discuss
the security law with China's leaders.
A police spokesperson, responding to questions for Tang from Reuters,
said violent attacks by protesters last year - including the use of
"sharpened instruments, metal rods, bows and arrows, petrol bombs,
corrosive liquid and explosive substances" - had put "national security"
at risk. This threat to public safety and "forces" advocating
independence, the spokesperson said, required "effective measures to
prevent the situation from deteriorating."
The police force, the officer said, will "fully perform its duties and
strictly enforce the law to restore social order and ensure the
effective implementation of the National Security Law" in Hong Kong.
Explaining the need for the new law, a Hong Kong government spokesman
said that in addition to "frequent violence over the past year," there
had also been "actions in pursuit of independence." The spokesman was
responding to questions sent to Lee and Cheng.
Lam did not respond to questions about the increasingly dominant role
played by Tang. Mainland authorities did not respond to questions from
Reuters for this story.
PIVOTAL SHOWDOWN
Though the new law came into effect last week, Tang had already begun
spearheading the crackdown in Hong Kong months earlier. In mid-November,
the city was in open revolt. Months of protests had shattered the
authority of the local government and demoralized its 30,000-strong
police force. As the demonstrations reached a climax, Beijing announced
the appointment of Tang.
He moved into the Commissioner of Police's office in November, just as a
pivotal showdown was underway. Demonstrators, some armed with Molotov
cocktails and bows and arrows, had barricaded themselves inside Hong
Kong Polytechnic University. It was a tactical blunder. Police pounced.
In earlier protests, demonstrators were able to melt away through the
labyrinth of Hong Kong streets and regroup elsewhere. This time they
were trapped. Hundreds of police sealed the entrances to the campus and
seized any protesters attempting to leave. More than 1,100 were
eventually arrested. It was a turning point for the embattled
authorities. For the first time in months, beleaguered police officers
had outmaneuvered the protesters.
At the end of Tang's first day in the top job, he went straight to the
front line to congratulate his officers. Dressed in a dark civilian
jacket and trousers, he stood out. He shook hands and chatted with weary
riot police in helmets and heavy protective gear.
Tang has since remained on the offensive, aided in part by the COVID-19
pandemic, which effectively shut down the protests for several months.
He has used pre-emptive arrests and stop-and-search measures to prevent
protests, and issued blunt rallying cries to buoy his officers. After
police thwarted a protest in late May at the city's Legislative Council,
Tang took to police radio to congratulate the force.
Pro-democracy lawmakers, academics and foreign diplomats say that the
new security law signals the death of the "one country, two systems"
model used to govern Hong Kong. In place since the 1997 handover of the
city to China, the arrangement has afforded Hong Kong a high degree of
autonomy and has protected a wide array of freedoms enjoyed by the
city's residents, such as freedom of expression and the press, that
don't exist on the mainland.
Many say the city is increasingly being run from Beijing. Mainland
Chinese officials have been appointed as the city's top national
security adviser and head of a new national security agency in Hong Kong
that will have overarching authority, including an enforcement role in
the most serious cases.
"We are in a situation where the Chinese Communist Party controls the
police, and the police controls Hong Kong," said veteran pro-democracy
legislator James To, who has monitored policing and security matters for
decades. "It is not the way Hong Kong is supposed to work, or has worked
up until recently."
Hong Kong, he added, has become "a security police state."
The new law quickly sent a chill through the city. Hours before it was
imposed, pro-democracy activist Joshua Wong said that Demosisto, a group
he led, was disbanding, while a prominent member of the group, Nathan
Law, departed the city. Wong told Reuters the group took the decision
because it was concerned about the safety of its members.
A man carrying a popular protest slogan – "Liberate Hong Kong.
Revolution of our times" - drove his motorcycle into a police line last
week knocking over three officers in protest against the security
legislation. He became the first person to be charged with incitement to
secession and terrorist activities under the law. The man, who has yet
to enter a plea, was later denied bail and remanded in custody. The city
government said the slogan connoted separatism or subversion under the
new law.
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Hong Kong's Commissioner of Police Chris Tang Ping-keung attends a
news conference in Beijing, China December 7, 2019. REUTERS/Jason
Lee/File Photo
'HOME-GROWN TERRORISM'
The legislation, Tang said this week, was doing its job. He told
China's state broadcaster CCTV that the enactment of the law was
already having a "positive effect" on the stability of Hong Kong. It
appeared to have led to some people dropping out of the protest
movement, he said, without naming anyone.
Tang has likened the actions of some of the protesters to terrorism
- a line that the leadership in Beijing has used to justify the
legislation. In a May 25 statement, he said that police had
uncovered 14 cases involving explosives and five cases where genuine
firearms and ammunition were seized since the protests began.
And he highlighted the threat of what he called "home-grown
terrorism" in a video published on a government-backed website in
mid-April. The video included footage of explosions during the siege
at Polytechnic University, where protesters hurled Molotov cocktails
and fired arrows at police. It also shows a plane slamming into one
of the World Trade Center towers on Sept. 11, 2001, as Tang is heard
explaining to viewers that the incidents involving explosives in
Hong Kong are "very similar to these overseas cases."
Critics of the video called the comparison ludicrous. The Hong Kong
protests grew out of broad, grassroots opposition in the city to the
extradition bill. The 9/11 attacks, which killed thousands of
people, were carried out by members of al Qaeda.
A police spokesman said that Tang, "by no means, compared peaceful
protests to terrorism."
Tang makes no secret of where his loyalties lie. In December, he
made his first official trip to Beijing as police chief. On a crisp
and clear December morning, he was in Tiananmen Square to watch
soldiers raise the Chinese national flag, in a choreographed
appearance that senior colleagues say is typical of his working
style.
"Today is the first time I've watched the flag-raising ceremony at
such close range," he told state television. "In my heart I felt
very emotional to see our country's national flag fluttering. I
could feel our country's power."
Tang's visit to the capital was widely seen as unusually high
profile for a Hong Kong police commissioner. While he was in
Beijing, top Chinese leaders toasted his success. Public Security
Minister Zhao Kezhi told Tang that the central government and the
security ministry were fully behind the Hong Kong police, according
to the ministry's website. Tang was quoted as replying that his
force would "throw all of its energy" into curbing the violence and
unrest in Hong Kong.
When China's State Council in November announced Tang's appointment,
the message communicated from Beijing was clear, a senior Hong Kong
police officer said. "Tang had to act fast," the officer said. "The
police were near mutiny, they were so angry at Lam" for not
resolving the political impasse.
Another senior police officer said another message came down from
the Chinese leadership. As he put it: "You can't compromise with the
protesters anymore," a reference to situations last year where
demonstrators had been allowed to escape when police could have
arrested them.
NEW MOTTO
Like all of his predecessors in post-colonial Hong Kong, Tang was
carefully vetted by the Communist Party for loyalty and ability,
several senior police officers told Reuters. Tang's official
biography details his international connections along with his
stints at elite party and security schools in mainland China. It
also includes spells at Interpol headquarters in the French city of
Lyon, the Royal College of Defence Studies in London and the U.S.
Federal Bureau of Investigation's training academy in Quantico,
Virginia.
What is not mentioned is a domestic role that was key in his rise.
Promoted to senior superintendent of the Hong Kong force in 2007,
Tang returned from Lyon and began working at the Liaison Bureau, a
small office in one of the most secure wings of the police
headquarters building. Tang helped ease lingering suspicions between
what had been an anti-communist British colonial force and mainland
police loyal to the Communist Party, say those who knew him at the
time.
Tang played a key role in forging new working-level ties between
Hong Kong and mainland police, establishing joint investigation
protocols and an electronic information-sharing network. In a 2016
academic paper published by Hong Kong researcher Sonny Lo, Tang was
cited extensively after being interviewed on his liaison work in the
2000s with Chinese law enforcement, including criminal
investigation, intelligence sharing, evidence collection and
tactical training. Tang lectured to the force on this work and how
to foster close relationships with mainland counterparts as ties
expanded, according to an account in an internal police newspaper.
Tang studied at the elite school for Communist Party cadres on the
outskirts of Shanghai, known as the Chinese Executive Leadership
Academy. He later attended the People's Public Security University
in Beijing.
By 2015, Tang was promoted to assistant commissioner, and then, in
2017, to the powerful role of operations director, considered a
stepping stone to the top job.
Tang has made a concerted effort to be seen as the public face of
the force since he got the top job. Senior officers who have worked
with him say Tang insists on tight control over media appearances.
He's always perfectly groomed, even if called out late at night, as
he was when he visited police at the Polytechnic University showdown
last year.
On the day he took office, Tang introduced a new police motto,
altering its communal focus: "We Serve with Pride and Care" became
"Serving Hong Kong with Honour, Duty and Loyalty."
The Hong Kong government has lavished resources on Tang's force. In
March, the police won a 25% budget increase to recruit an extra
2,500 officers and procure the latest surveillance tools and
protective gear.
Some rank-and-file cops say Tang's hard-charging approach has
revived morale in the force, shattered last year by the protests and
a barrage of public complaints about police brutality. Amnesty
International accused the Hong Kong police of carrying out
"arbitrary arrests" and "brutal beatings."
The police chief is confronting his critics. A massive backlash
against pro-Beijing parties in the aftermath of the extradition bill
delivered control of 90% of local district councils to pro-democracy
forces in elections last November. Tang endured hostile questioning
from some of these councils when asked to explain police tactics and
answer allegations of police brutality. He stood his ground. It's
the protesters who should "apologize," not police, he told one
council meeting in January where members criticized the police.
Tang's higher-octane approach was on display when he took to the
radio to congratulate his officers after they foiled the late-May
protest at the Legislative Council, allowing for a debate over a
bill outlawing insults to the Chinese national anthem to proceed.
The law ultimately passed.
"As long as the upper and lower ranks of the police force share the
same spirit, victory will come," he told his officers. Tang was
quoting from the ancient sage of Chinese military strategy, Sun Tzu,
author of "The Art of War."
(Reporting by Greg Torode, James Pomfret and David Lague. Additional
reporting by Anne Marie Roantree, Clare Jim and Jessie Pang in Hong
Kong. Edited by Peter Hirschberg.)
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