China passes controversial national security law for Hong Kong

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China passes controversial national security law for Hong Kong

Hong Kong Police Guard of Honour raises a Chinese national flag and a Hong Kong flag during a flag raising ceremony at the Golden Bauhinia Square on June 15, 2020 in Hong Kong, China.

Anthony Kwan | Getty Images

The top decision-making body in China’s parliament has passed the contentious national security law for Hong Kong, according to a member of the Standing Committee of China’s National People’s Congress.

Tam Yiu Chung, the sole Hong Kong delegate to the committee, confirmed on Tuesday that the law was passed. Reuters cited Cable TV earlier and reported that the law was passed unanimously.

It comes ahead of tomorrow’s anniversary marking Hong Kong’s handover from the U.K. to mainland China on July 1, 1997. 

Hong Kong — a former British colony governed under the “one country, two systems” framework — enjoys some freedoms that other Chinese cities do not have. They include limited election rights and a largely separate legal and economic system. 

Critics say the new law will undermine the autonomy promised to the special administrative region for 50 years after the handover — or until 2047. There is no clarity on what will happen when the policy ceases.

Few details about the law have been unveiled, but Beijing says the legislation is aimed at prohibiting secession, subversion of state power, terrorism activities and foreign interference. It was proposed during China’s annual parliamentary meeting in late May and reignited protests in Hong Kong over fears that the city’s freedoms would be eroded.

Following reports of that the law had been passed, prominent Hong Kong activist Joshua Wong announced that he would be stepping down as secretary general of pro-democracy party, Demosisto, and withdrawing from the group. Fellow members Nathan Law and Agnes Chow made similar announcements on Facebook.

The South China Morning Post reported that Hong Kong delegates to China’s top advisory body have been asked to attend a meeting at 3 p.m. on Tuesday. It also cited sources who said state news agency Xinhua would publish details of the legislation in the afternoon. A full draft of the law has not been publicly revealed thus far.

‘Deterrent effect’ of the law

Many are concerned about Beijing encroaching on Hong Kong’s rights and freedoms, in part because the new law bypassed the city’s own lawmakers.

It is also seen as a way for China to gain more control and crush dissent, after Hong Kong saw prolonged — and sometimes violent — protests over a now-withdrawn extradition bill.

Earlier this week, Eurasia Group said that passing the law before the anniversary of the handover could be an indication that Beijing wants to “clamp down on protests far ahead” of Hong Kong’s legislative council elections in September. If the law were to take effect before the annual march on July 1, it could expose demonstrators to new legal risks and “further sap momentum from protesters,” Eurasia said.

A research fellow at Lowy Institute agreed.

“A lot of groups will be thinking twice about their behavior for tomorrow,” Natasha Kassam told CNBC’s “Street Signs Asia” on Tuesday. “The law will have a deterrent effect even though we don’t actually know the contents of it yet. And in that sense, I think Beijing will consider this to be a success story, at least in the short term.”

Meanwhile, businesses see the need for a security law, but want to know what it entails and how it will be implemented, David Dodwell, executive director of the Hong Kong-APEC Trade Policy Group, told CNBC in early June.

Reuters reported that a national security office would be set up in Hong Kong to collect intelligence and handle related crimes, and that the city’s leader, Carrie Lam, would be allowed to appoint specific judges to hear national security cases. 

Lam said she would not do so, but would select a panel of judges that the judiciary can choose from, according to Reuters. 

She has also said the new law would not infringe on Hong Kong’s way of life, but would target a “small minority of illegal and criminal acts.”

International backlash

Countries including the U.K. have criticized Beijing over the law which they say will violate the rights of Hong Kong citizens. The European Parliament this month voted for the EU to take China to the International Court of Justice if the national security law is imposed on Hong Kong, Reuters reported.

The U.S. Senate last week passed legislation that would impose mandatory sanctions on people or companies that back efforts by China to restrict Hong Kong’s autonomy. But for the Hong Kong Autonomy Act to become law, it must be passed by the House of Representatives and signed by U.S. President Donald Trump.

It came after Secretary of State Mike Pompeo told Congress in late May that the city was no longer highly independent from China.

China has hit back and urged the U.S. not to interfere in its domestic affairs.

“No matter how vociferous the separatist forces in Hong Kong and how pressured by external anti-China forces, they can’t stop China’s determination and actions to promote Hong Kong’s national security legislation,” said Zhao Lijian, deputy director of the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs Information Department. “Their plot will fail, and the relevant bill is also a piece of waste paper.”

— CNBC’s Huileng Tan, Yen Nee Lee, Tucker Higgins contributed to this report.

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