The
United States had to "take a stand against China's crackdown in
Hong Kong," said Tony Blinken, a senior foreign policy advisor
for Biden, the likely Democratic nominee to take on Trump in
November's election.
He said the former vice president would rally American allies to
pressure China, leverage he said Trump had "forfeited," and
criticized the Republican president for praising leader Xi
Jinping in the face of pro-democracy protests that shook the
territory last year.
A Biden administration would "fully enforce" the Hong Kong Human
Rights and Democracy Act, "including sanctions on officials,
financial institutions, companies and individuals," Blinken said
in a statement.
The act, approved by Trump last year, requires the State
Department to certify at least annually that Hong Kong retains
enough autonomy to justify the favorable U.S. trading terms that
have helped it remain a world financial center.
U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo told Congress on Wednesday
the proposed new legislation undermines Hong Kong's autonomy so
fundamentally that he could not support recertification.
It now falls to President Donald Trump to decide to end some,
all or none of the U.S. economic privileges the territory
enjoys. He said on Tuesday Washington was working on a strong
response that would be announced before the end of the week.
Beijing's security proposal, unveiled last week, sparked the
first large street demonstrations in Hong Kong for months.
Pro-democracy demonstrators in Hong Kong have for years opposed
the idea of national security laws, arguing they could erode the
city's high degree of autonomy guaranteed under the "one
country, two systems" formula in place for two decades.
"China shouldn't get the economic benefit of Hong Kong's free
economy without the rule of law that underpins it," Blinken
said.
(Reporting by Michael Martina; Editing by Sonya Hepinstall)
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