| The 
				move is certain to ratchet up tensions between London and 
				Beijing as Britain opens its doors to potentially more than five 
				million residents of Hong Kong in the wake of the contentious 
				security legislation.
 "After several interviews in four months, the Home Office has 
				informed me that my asylum application is approved," Law said on 
				Twitter late on Wednesday.
 
 "The fact that I am wanted under the national security law shows 
				that I am exposed to severe political persecution and am 
				unlikely to return to Hong Kong without risk."
 
 Ramping up sweeteners to lure Hong Kong residents, Britain on 
				Thursday pledged 43 million pounds ($59 million) to help them 
				find jobs, houses and schools under the initiative allowing 
				millions to resettle.
 
 Britain has accused China of multiple breaches of an agreement 
				under which it handed the city back to China in 1997. It says 
				China's security law and moves to disqualify pro-democracy 
				legislators have undermined the semi-autonomous city's high 
				degree of autonomy.
 
 Hong Kong and Beijing officials have said the law is vital to 
				plug holes in national security defences exposed by months of 
				often violent protests in 2019. China has repeatedly told 
				Western powers to stop meddling in Hong Kong's affairs.
 
 Britain has violated international law and interfered in Hong 
				Kong's judicial system, said China's foreign ministry spokesman 
				Zhao Lijian, in response to a question on the granting of 
				asylum.
 
 "The U.K. side should immediately correct its mistake and stop 
				interfering in Hong Kong matters and China's internal affairs," 
				he said, speaking at a daily briefing in Beijing on Thursday.
 
 Hong Kongers became the fifth-largest foreign investors in 
				central London as of last August and have been driving up prices 
				in some popular districts outside the British capital.
 
 London estimates that over 300,000 Hong Kong residents could 
				emigrate over the next five years, and Bank of America expects 
				Hong Kong residents moving to Britain could trigger capital 
				outflows of $36 billion in 2021.
 
 (Reporting by Anne Marie Roantree; Additional reporting by 
				Gabriel Crossley; Editing by Stephen Coates and Kim Coghill)
 
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