"We
expect companies to support improvements in protections for
citizens and not back their removal," said Roland Bosch, lead
engager for financial services at Federated Hermes's stewardship
and engagement team.
The new law could have an adverse impact on human rights, he
said.
Aviva Investors, another leading HSBC shareholder, said earlier
this month it was uneasy about the bank's show of public support
for the law.
China's parliament passed the new national security legislation
for Hong Kong on Tuesday, setting the stage for the most radical
changes to the former British colony's way of life since it
returned to Chinese rule 23 years ago.
Details of the law are due out later on Tuesday, amid fears the
legislation will crush the global financial hub's freedoms and
reports that the heaviest penalty under it would be life
imprisonment.
Senior politicians on both sides of the Atlantic have criticised
HSBC's stance.
The bank's Asia-Pacific Chief Executive Peter Wong signed a
petition backing the law earlier this month, which also drew ire
from human rights groups.
(Reporting by Lawrence White, Additional reporting by Iain
Withers; Editing by Tom Arnold and Ed Osmond)
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