Posted on 06/15/2019 10:09:08 AM PDT by texas booster
On Sunday, hundreds of thousands of people jammed the busy downtown streets of Hong Kong to protest against the local governments proposed bill that would allow extraditions to the Chinese mainland.
The mass demonstration could well be the largest in Hong Kongs history but the mainlands official media has largely remained silent, except for a few outlets including the Global Times which accused the local opposition camp of colluding with foreign forces to fan chaos in Hong Kong to hurt the mainland.
Blaming foreign forces for causing havoc in Hong Kong has always been the official mainland medias default position but the Hong Kong governments current crisis is largely of its own making.
To put it bluntly, Chief Executive Carrie Lam s plan to bulldoze through the local legislature with the bill is ill-timed, ill-advised and ill-thought-out, and she and her officials are ill-prepared for not seeing the bigger picture and for the extraordinary pushback from the general public in Hong Kong and the international community.
But, alas, no matter how the crisis ends, no one is a winner and Hong Kong as a whole loses its reputation, the independence of its judiciary and the confidence of the international community in its status as a leading financial centre.
Back in February when Hong Kong first introduced the proposed extradition law, officials expected its passage to be a breeze.
Lam appears to have taken a personal interest in expediting the laws passage after she was moved by petition letters from the family members of a slain victim in a gruesome case. It involved a Hong Kong youth Chan Tong-kai who admitted murdering his pregnant girlfriend and dumping her body in a suitcase in Taipei last year before fleeing back to Hong Kong.
In April, Chan was jailed for 29 months on related money-laundering charges, but ever since he was arrested in March last year, the Hong Kong government has repeatedly stressed the urgency of passing the bill so that he could be extradited to Taiwan on murder charges before he walked out of prison.
The rush to pass the law appeared to serve two purposes at once. First, it would help bring justice for the aggrieved family, and, second, it would plug a major legal loophole as it would allow for extradition on a case-by-case basis to jurisdictions including China and Taiwan not covered by current extradition and legal assistance programmes.
There has been intense speculation in Hong Kong and elsewhere that Lam pushed for the law at the request of Beijing. She herself strongly denied this and said she had not received any instruction from Beijing and the bill was not initiated by the central government.
This is probably true. Beijing is more concerned with seeing the passage of the national security legislation, known as Article 23. That proposed law to prohibit treason, secession, sedition and subversion was shelved in 2003 following mass protests on fears that it would erode civil liberties enshrined in the Basic Law. Since then, Beijing has tried to lobby the Hong Kong government to reintroduce the law.
Even so, Beijing would not be against Hong Kongs move, as it would also make it much easier for the central government to hunt down and extradite businessmen and corrupt officials who often hole up in Hong Kong after they fall foul of the mainland authorities.
What has transpired has shown that Lam and her senior officials had gravely and naively underestimated the extraordinary pushback from Hong Kong people from all walks of life, particularly from the usually docile but powerful business community in the city, over their deeply held fears and concerns about the lack of rule of law on the mainland.
Trained as a career civil servant, Lam, along with senior officials in her cabinet, seems to lack political sophistication and acute political antennae. By introducing the law, she seemed to believe that she was enhancing the rule of law in the city and ensuring Hong Kong would not become a safe haven for fugitives.
Thus, the local government failed to communicate adequately with major stakeholders in the city, including the business community, the press and foreign nationals.
Many people have voiced loud concerns that they could end up in a mainland legal system where they would not be afforded fair trials and rights protection.
Hong Kong Chief Secretary Matthew Cheung Kin-chung admitted as much in his interview with the South China Morning Post published on Tuesday. He said that had the government communicated with the community much better from day one, the situation would have been different.
In the name of urgency, the government bypassed the proper procedures and process and failed to allow public consultation over the proposed law. In contrast, some cynics pointed out that in April, the government launched a three-month consultation on how to better protect animals and ensure owners will have their dogs and cats fed, cared for and given adequate medical attention.
Some may argue that given the divisive political climate, a three-month or even longer consultation was unlikely to achieve much, but by going through the process and engaging the community better, the government would have had a much stronger case and won greater popular support to push for the bill.
After all, the urgency behind the original motivation for the bill has dissipated as the Taiwanese authorities have made it clear they may not cooperate if Hong Kong presses on with the proposed law.
Because of their political naivety, Hong Kong officials have also failed to appreciate the wider geopolitical risks from the potential fallout over the introduction of the law. With Taiwans presidential election cycle already heating up, both the ruling Democratic Progressive Party and a potential opposition candidate the electronics tycoon Terry Gou have both used Hong Kongs mass protests as proof that the mainlands one country, two systems formula has failed.
More importantly, the mass protests have drawn widespread international attention, particularly from the United States, where the State Department has expressed grave concern over the bill.
It could potentially complicate Beijings efforts to battle Washington over trade frictions as both sides have hiked fresh tariffs on each other and hardened their rhetoric ahead of a scheduled meeting between President Xi Jinping and his American counterpart Donald Trump at the G20 summit in Japan this month.
What happens next? Although the Hong Kong government may introduce safeguards and refine the bill to ease concerns, it is unlikely to back down and shelve the proposed bill as demanded by the protesters. Beijing has expressed full support for Lams efforts and so long as the pro-government legislators, who command a majority in the local legislature, stay united, the bill has a high chance of passing. But the political fallout has put a dent in Hong Kongs reputation. ■
Wang Xiangwei is the former editor-in-chief of the South China Morning Post. He is now based in Beijing as editorial adviser to the paper.
Thanks texas booster. Beijing blinked.
Blame both.
Hong Kong CE represents Beijing.
Beijing is Chinese Communist Party.
Headline makes no sense.
“Beijing blinked.”
Good.
Now send him to Taiwan for trial.
This entire thing is absurd.
The communist Chinese bastards are stepping up their oppression
They regularly jail people with no trial and youll never see them again and then they harvest the organs and throw your body in the trash
Hong Kong has a long British history and thus fair courts and rule of law
You can bet the people of that little tiny island dominated to the north by the giant communist megalopolis do not want what is taking place in the mainland coming there
Unfortunately if youre run by the peoples Republic of China and the communist cabal that runs that country youre going to eventually reap what you sow
I would get the hell out of Hong Kong as fast as possible
Not the same - that guy was beaten to death shortly after the picture was taken, then the mountain troops opened up with armor piercing rounds firing continuously for the next 48 hours - killing everyone in range ...
This is a far different problem/situation.
HK supposedly wants to extradite him back for murder but needs this law to do it?
Need more background.
“HK supposedly wants to extradite him back for murder but needs this law to do it?”
Incorrect.
The murder took place in Taiwan.
It is absurd in that the Communist government wants him sent to China, not Taiwan.
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