1 Jun 2020

China media, Hong Kong government bristle at Trump's pledge of curbs, sanctions

7:41 am on 1 June 2020

China's state media and the government of Hong Kong lashed out at US President Donald Trump's vow to end Hong Kong's special status if Beijing imposes new national security laws on the city.

A pro-China activist holds an effigy of US President Donald Trump during a protest outside the US consulate in Hong Kong on May 30, 2020, in response to Trump's sanctions pledge.

A pro-China activist holds an effigy of US President Donald Trump during a protest outside the US consulate in Hong Kong on May 30, 2020, in response to Trump's sanctions pledge. Photo: Isaac Lawrence / AFP

Trump last week pledged to "take action to revoke Hong Kong's preferential treatment as a separate customs and travel territory", and to impose sanctions on unspecified individuals over Beijing's new laws on the Asian financial centre.

But China's state media pushed back, saying this would hurt the United States more than China.

"The baton of sanctions that the United States is brandishing will not scare Hong Kong and will not bring China down," China's Communist Party mouthpiece, the People's Daily, wrote in a commentary. It used the pen name "Zhong Sheng", meaning "Voice of China", often used to give the paper's view on foreign policy issues.

The Global Times wrote, "China has already prepared for the worst. No matter how far the US goes, China will keep its company."

US President Donald Trump speaking on 6 May 2020

US President Donald Trump. Photo: AFP

A Hong Kong government spokesman expressed regret the United States continued to "smear and demonise the legitimate rights and duty of our sovereign" to safeguard national security.

In a sign of diplomatic manoeuvring, the US government said it would put one of its prime Hong Kong properties up for sale - a luxury residential complex worth up to HK$5 billion ($NZ1b).

A spokesman for the US consulate in Hong Kong said this was part of a global programme that "reinforces the US government's presence in Hong Kong" through reinvestment in other areas.

China and Hong Kong officials have justified the laws that will be directly imposed by China to restore order to a city that has been wracked by sometimes violent anti-China, anti-government protests over the past year. They said the laws will only apply to a small number of "troublemakers."

Protesters, however, have said they are railing against China's deep encroachment on Hong Kong's autonomy and freedoms despite Beijing's promise to grant the city a high degree of autonomy under a so-called "one-country, two systems" formula since it reverted from British to Chinese rule in 1997.

Protesters march on a road during a pro-democracy rally against a proposed new security law

Protesters march on a road during a pro-democracy rally against a proposed new security law in Hong Kong. Photo: AFP

More protests are planned in the coming weeks.

Countries including the United States, Canada and Britain have expressed deep concerns about the law, with Britain saying it may grant expanded visa rights to large numbers of Hong Kongers.

Demosisto, an advocacy group led by prominent young Hong Kong democracy activist Joshua Wong, said the security law would be "the death of freedom in Hong Kong".

A senior Hong Kong official, Erick Tsang, said he could not care less if he were sanctioned by Washington.

"I wouldn't even go to Canada, just in case they try to catch me" there, Tsang told local radio.

Details of the laws remain unclear, even to Hong Kong officials, but are expected to be enacted by China's parliament this summer. The laws will outlaw secession, subversion, terrorism and foreign interference in Hong Kong, and will be imposed without any local legislative scrutiny.

-Reuters

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