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Huge rally in Hong Kong against anti-subversion laws
By John Chan
8 July 2003
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Up to half a million people marched in Hong Kong on July 1the
sixth anniversary of Britains handover to Chinato
protest against new anti-subversion legislation being
enacted by the Beijing-installed administration of Chief Executive
Tung Chee-hwa. The National Security Bill, legislated under Article
23 of Hong Kongs Basic Law, would effectively extend Chinas
police-state methods into the former British colony.
The rally was the largest since one million people took to
the streets of Hong Kong on June 4, 1989, to protest against the
Stalinist regimes massacre of workers and youth in Tiananmen
Square. Most of the marchers were dressed in black T-shirts to
symbolise the death of democratic rights in Hong Kong. They marched
through the city from Victoria Park to the downtown government
buildings, bringing the citys public transportation system
to a temporarily standstill.
People carried flags and banners against Chief Executive Tung
and Article 23. Slogans included, For the sake of Hong Kong,
for the sake of freedom, oppose Article 23, Return
political power to the people! and We are tired, we
are angry, just step down!. More than 1,300 police were
deployed.
A retired nurse told Reuters: This [Article 23] will
push Hong Kong toward an era of tyranny. A lawyer Terry
Chan commented: The government is trying to use the law
to suppress people's views and voices. Yan Sui-lei, a middle-aged
mother, who brought her young daughter, said: Im not
here for myself, Im here for the next generations
freedoms.
In 1997, when handing power to Beijing, the British government
claimed that democratic rights would be protected: the city would
function as a special autonomous region of China for 50 years
under the Basic Lawa local constitution. However, Beijing
insisted, particularly following the Hong Kong protests against
the Tiananmen Square massacre, that the Basic Law include a special
clauseArticle 23to allow for new security laws.
In the aftermath of Tiananmen Square, a number of dissidents
took refuge in Hong Kong. The Beijing regime particularly wanted
to crackdown on groups and individuals regarded as political threats,
not only to Hong Kong but to China as a whole.
Article 23 authorised the Hong Kong government to enact
laws on its own to prohibit any act of treason, sedition, subversion
against the central government, or theft of state secrets, to
prohibit foreign political organisations or bodies from conducting
political activities in the Region, and to prohibit political
organisations or bodies of Region from establishing ties with
foreign political organisations or bodies.
Under the National Security Bill, opposition groups and dissidents,
including members of the China Democracy Party and the Falun Gong
movement who found sanctuary in Hong Kong, could be specifically
targetted. Anyone belonging to a group with connections to an
organisation banned under Beijings security laws will be
regarded as endangering national security and subject
to the bill.
Clause 4 of the bill provides for a broad definition of subversion
against the Peoples Republic of China, including using
force or serious criminal means that seriously endangers
its stability. The charge, which carried a life-sentence, may
apply to Hong Kong residents taking part in anti-Beijing protests
while in another country.
The offence of sedition is just as all-encompassing. Critics
have pointed out that journalists could be charged under the bill
for inciting others to engage in violent public disorder
that would seriously endanger the stability of China. The
legislation declares that publications will only be considered
seditious when there is an intention to incite others
to commit treason, subversion or secession. However, what constitutes
intention has been left vague and ill defined.
The bill gives the police extensive powers to deal with those
suspected of security offences. In particular, its emergency
investigation power enables the police to conduct house
raids without a warrant.
Broad discontent
Last weeks protest far exceeded the expectations of the
organisers, who had predicted 100,000 would attend. Moreover,
while the participants were obviously outraged by the anti-democratic
measures, there were broader concerns about the Tung administration
and deteriorating social conditions. Like the majority of the
Hong Kong legislature, Tung, a billionaire business tycoon, was
not elected but was installed by Beijing.
The Washington Post noted: While the protest was
planned to express opposition to a proposed national security
law, it turned into a forum for all sorts of grievancesfrom
a general dislike of Tung to high unemployment rates to his bungled
handling of the SARS crisis that ravaged Hong Kong for months.
According to the Singapore-based Straits Times, a bus
workers representative Mak Tak Cheng, for example, called
his fellow workers to take action. Lets join the march
to protest against the territorys historic high jobless
rate, he declared. Other groups, including health-care workers,
demanded an independent investigation into the Tung governments
handling of the SARS outbreak in Hong Kong.
The return of Hong Kong to China coincided with the 1997-98
Asian financial crisis, which hit the islands economy hard
and destroyed the so-called free-market miracle. The
collapse of the real estate bubble of the late 1990s resulted
in a 65 percent fall in property prices, leaving tens of thousands
of middle-class families with negative assets and
struggling to pay off huge mortgages.
The economic problems were compounded by the SARS outbreak,
which produced a sharp downturn in tourism. The citys jobless
rate has jumped to 8.2 percent, compared to 2.3 percent five years
ago. Pay and conditions in the islands large service industry
have deteriorated and there are limited social security provisions.
A recent survey by the Public Opinion Program of Hong Kong University
found that nearly half the population expressed general dissatisfaction
with present conditionsup 14 percent since March.
Commenting on last weeks protest, political scientist
Paul Harris from Hong Kongs Lingnan University told the
AFP news agency: This is phenomenala much, much bigger
demonstration than I have seen here before... Hong Kong people
can be cynical and sometimes skeptical about how much of an effect
of any change they can make. Nevertheless, they have braved the
heat and turned out in force to show their opposition. This is
a reflection of a much wider issueit also attacks the government.
The government cant simply ignore such outpouring of animosity.
Mr Tung is clearly out of touch with reality on the ground.
The same could be said of the Chinese Stalinist bureaucracy.
Just hours before the protest began, Chinese premier Wen Jiabao
left the city after a short official ceremony with local officials
and business leaders to mark the sixth anniversary of the British
handover. He attempted to assure the population that the new security
legislation absolutely will not affect the different rights
and freedoms of Hong Kong people. Wen is supposedly one
of the pro-democracy reformers in the new Chinese
leadership.
Both the Tung administration and Beijing were shocked by the
size of last weeks protest. Initially the authorities attempted
to tough out the opposition. The Beijing-backed newspaper Wen
Wei Po, for example, denounced the march as orchestrated
by some forces with ulterior motives and warned that it
would threaten the social stability of Hong Kong.
Last Thursday, Hong Kongs police chief Tsang Yam-pui
threatened to outlaw a further protest timed to coincide with
the final vote on the bill this Wednesday. To besiege the
legislative building and affect the legislative operation is an
illegal act, he declared. Opponents of the law, who had
called for a rally to encircle the building, indicated they did
not intend to blockade the meeting.
On Saturday, Tung called a press conference and backed down
on three elements of the National Security Bill in an attempt
to placate the opposition. The provision to outlaw groups connected
to organisations banned in mainland China has been dropped, along
with plans to allow police to raid houses without a warrant. Journalists
who disclose government information will be able to defend themselves
by saying their actions were in the public interest.
Pressure continued to mount, however, with opponents criticising
the amendments as inadequate and calling for the legislation to
be delayed. Yesterday, after insisting all weekend that the vote
would go ahead, Tung was forced to announce that the bill would
be put off until further consultation had taken place. Just hours
before, one of his key allies, James Tien, chairman of the big
business Liberal Party, resigned from the Executive Council and
called for the legislation to be delayed.
The events of the last week have exposed just how isolated
and vulnerable the Hong Kong administration is. Tung may have
survived the immediate crisis but his political future is now
in doubt.
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