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WSWS : News
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Hong Kong government withdraws proposed security law
By John Chan
29 September 2003
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In the face of overwhelming popular opposition, Hong Kong chief
executive Tung Chee-hwa announced at a special press conference
on September 5 that his administration was shelving its proposed
anti-subversion legislation.
The legislation, drafted under Article 23 of Hong Kongs
constitution or Basic Law, amounts to a fundamental assault on
the democratic rights of the Hong Kong population. If ever enacted,
it will criminalise any organisations that are banned on mainland
China and enable the prosecution of Hong Kong citizens for inciting
treason and subversion against the Beijing regime.
On July 1, as many as 500,000 Hong Kong residents demonstrated
in a mass rally to defend their liberties, sparking the greatest
political crisis since Britain returned Hong Kong to Chinese sovereignty
in 1997. Stunned by the extent of opposition, Tung removed three
of the most draconian clauses from the legislation. Despite this
concession, James Tien, leader of the Liberal Party and Tungs
main political ally in the islands Legislative Council,
resigned from the executive council. Without the Liberal Partys
support, Tung lacked the necessary numbers to push the new laws
through the legislature.
However, the Chinese regime continued to pressure Tung throughout
July and into August to find the ways and means of passing the
bill. Social tensions in China are steadily building and the Beijing
authorities have grown increasingly anxious over the ability of
mainland oppositional movements to use the island as a base for
their activities.
By mid-August, the situation had become untenable. Any attempt
to enact the anti-subversion laws would have provoked further
demonstrations and civil unrest. Tung and the Chinese government
faced a difficult choiceprepare to repress the popular opposition,
or back down and risk emboldening their opponents. Either option
carried political dangers.
The final nail in the coffin of the legislation came on August
21 in the form of an unprecedented political intervention by Hong
Kongs and Chinas most powerful business tycoon. Li
Ka-shing, who has close ties to both Tung and Beijing, publicly
praised the July 1 demonstration as an example of Hong Kongs
democracy. The statement could only have been interpreted as advice
to shelve the anti-subversion laws. Four days later, a senior
mainland official, Liu Yandong, described the July 1 demonstrators
as patriotic. Within a fortnight, Tung made his announcement
that the legislation would be postponed indefinitely.
Tung continued to insist that enacting the legislation was
the Hong Kong governments constitutional duty. But due to
public doubts and concerns, he declared he would withdraw
it so as to allow sufficient time for the community to study
the enactment question. He also announced the formation
of a special group under his administrations Security Bureau
to review the legislation and to ultimately win over
public support.
The decision is partly motivated by concern in both Beijing
and Hong Kong over the outcome of next years Legislative
Council election. Under the hand-over agreement between China
and Britain, half of the 60 legislative seats in 2004 will be
elected by universal suffrage. The pro-Beijing big business parties,
such as the Liberal Party and the Democratic Alliance for Betterment
of Hong Kong, feared major losses if they supported Tung. Li Pang-kwong,
a politics academic at Hong Kongs Lingnan University, told
Associated Press on September 5: Mr. Tung is hoping that
the withdrawal will quell [the] public and voters wont pledge
overwhelming support to pro-democracy legislators in the 2004
election.
The Far Eastern Economic Review noted: Critics
of the new laws believe Beijing decided to endure the humiliation
of this backdown because the top leadership senses danger. In
the aftermath of the July 1 protest and two subsequent mass demonstrations,
it was clear that the central government had dramatically underestimated
the degree of public hostility to the national security laws and
the widespread resentment in Hong Kong over Tungs handling
of the economy.
At his September 5 press conference, Tung sought to appease
the population by pledging to turn his attention to reducing Hong
Kongs record level of unemployment. As Hong Kong is
going through a painful process of economic restructuring, especially
after the SARS outbreak, it is crucial that the government, the
trade and industrial sectors and the community as a whole concentrate
our efforts to revitalise and increase employment opportunities,
he said.
The mainland regime has announced measures intended to assist
Tung stimulate the economy. Restrictions on mainland Chinese tourists
visiting the island have been relaxed. Wealthy businessmen are
being encouraged by the Chinese government to invest in property
in Hong Kong in exchange for a legal residency. The construction
of a bridge connecting the island to the booming Pearl River Delta
industrial zone in the adjacent Guangdong province has also been
approved.
Another factor was the reaction in Taiwan, which China is hoping
to entice into a reunification agreement similar to Hong Kongs.
With elections coming up next March in Taiwan, anti-reunification
parties have appealed to voters by highlighting Tungs attempts
to implement anti-democratic legislation in Hong Kong.
Beijing was also concerned about the potential for unrest in
Hong Kong to spread to the mainland, particularly neighbouring
Guangdong. Tens of thousands of Hong Kong residents cross the
border every day to work, shop or visit their businesses, property
or relatives, bringing their ideas and news to the mainland population.
Hong Kong television networks broadcast throughout most of Guangdong,
and the scenes of the mass protests would have been seen by millions
of mainlanders.
Beijings political backdown in Hong Kong has encouraged
opposition movements on the island to broaden their activities.
The Washington Post commented on September 18 that the
July 1 protest marked a sea change in the populations
psychology: For decades the people of this territory have
been called apolitical, more interested in business than democracy.
When China took control of Hong Kong in 1997, many assumed that
the people of this former British colony would simply go from
being subjects of the British crown to being subjects of Beijing.
Now, the Post observed, broad layers of the population
are beginning to care about democracy.
The last time the Chinese regime so publicly made concessions
to placate mass discontent was in May 1989, when former Communist
Party secretary Zhao Ziyang initially lent official sympathy to
the demands of student protestors in Tiananmen Square. The governments
retreat before the students calls for a greater freedom
of speech became the catalyst for hundreds of thousands of workers
to take to the streets with their own social and democratic aspirations.
As the situation spiralled out of the control of the student leaders,
the military was sent in to massacre the anti-government protestors.
Beijings brutal repression on June 4, 1989 was carried
out to defend the interests of the bureaucratic apparatus and
the capitalist elite being spawned by the regimes free market
program. If seriously threatened again from belowwhether
on the mainland or in Hong Kongit would not hesitate to
use the same methods. Last years Chinas National
Defense report, for example, bluntly stated that one of the
Peoples Liberation Armys chief roles is to stop armed
subversion and safeguard social stability. It declared the
Chinese armed forces will strike hard, crush
and crack down on activities that threaten public
order or subvert state power.
Beijing has not given up on plans to give itself repressive
new security powers in Hong Kong. As the official Peoples
Daily editorialised on September 8: As part of China,
the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region is still legally bound
to pass a security law... Hong Kong has a duty to ensure that
no subversive activity is carried out on its territory. This is
not too complicated to understand.
See Also:
Hong Kong protests leave Tung
administration isolated
[30 July 2003]
Huge rally in Hong Kong against
anti-subversion laws
[8 July 2003]
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