Beijing's top official in Hong Kong warns foreign powers not to
interfere
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[April 15, 2021]
By Clare Jim and Pak Yiu
HONG KONG (Reuters) - Beijing's top
representative in Hong Kong warned foreign powers on Thursday that they
would be taught a lesson if they tried to use the global financial
centre as a "pawn", as tensions escalated between China and Western
governments over the city.
Luo Huining, the director at China's Hong Kong Liaison Office, was
speaking at a ceremony to mark an "education day" for the National
Security law, which authorities have organised to promote the sweeping
legislation China imposed last year.
"We will give a lesson to all foreign forces which intend to use Hong
Kong as a pawn," Luo said.
The new law drew criticism from the West for curbing rights and freedoms
in the former British colony, which was promised a high degree of
autonomy upon its 1997 return to Chinese rule. Its supporters say the
law has restored order following mass anti-government and anti-China
protests in 2019.
China, the United States, Britain and the European Union have traded
sanctions over the past year as the security law and measures taken to
reduce democratic representation in the city's institutions exacerbated
tensions.
Earlier this week, a letter signed by more than 100 British politicians
asked Boris Johnson's government to expand a list of Chinese officials
accused of "gross human rights abuses".
National Security Education Day will be marked with school activities,
games and shows, and a parade by police and other services performing
the Chinese military's "goose step" march.
The Chinese routine, in which troops keep their legs rigidly straight
when lifting them off the ground and arms swing at a 90-degree angle in
front of the chest, will replace British-style foot drills at a parade
of police and other forces.
A booth set up at the Hong Kong Police College was selling key-rings
reading "Warning tear smoke" and stickers reading "Disperse or we fire",
replicas of police banners which were common sights during the 2019
protests.
'SUPPORT! SUPPORT! SUPPORT!'
Elsewhere, in schools and cultural centres, Hong Kong residents were
invited to build national security "mosaic walls" to instil, according
to a government website, the idea that people should work together to
protect their homeland.
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Introducing of National Security law placards are placed at a
secondary school, ahead of National Security Education Day, in Hong
Kong, China April 12, 2021. Picture taken April 12, 2021.
REUTERS/Tyrone Siu
Stickers and bookmarks reading "Uphold National Security, Safeguard
our Home" have been delivered to schools and kindergartens.
At the Wong Cho Bau Secondary School in the city, students gathered
for a flag-raising ceremony.
"As a Chinese person, as Hong Kong people, what we need to do is to
be prepared, and exert ourselves, for the country," headmaster Hui
Chun Lung told students.
Hui stressed the "stability" the security law brought to the city,
before a two minute video showing different students expressing
support for the legislation.
Students then lined up to stick "wish cards" on a mosaic wall.
"Supporting the national security law is not an issue. Support!
Support! Support! I hope we can be one with the mainland," wrote one
student.
In February, Hong Kong unveiled national security education
guidelines that include teaching students as young as six about
colluding with foreign forces, terrorism, secession and subversion -
the four main crimes in the new law.
Chinese officials have partly blamed liberal studies for the
restlessness of the city's youth.
The school curriculum changes and the promotional campaigns are seen
as signs that Beijing's plans for the city go beyond quashing
dissent and that it aim for a societal overhaul to bring it more in
line with the Communist Party-ruled mainland.
(Additional reporting by Jessie Pang, Sharon Tam, Joyce Zhou and
Aleksander Solum; Writing by Marius Zaharia; Editing by Stephen
Coates and Raju Gopalakrishnan)
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