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Asia Times: People from US Political Circles Press Bush on Hong Kong Security Law (Clearwisdom.net) Asia Time reported on December 5 that an influential group in the Pentagon and Vice President Dick Cheney's office is
calling on US President George W Bush to review Hong Kong's special status if
the territory approves proposed national security laws.
The group, The Project for the New American Century (PNAC), has advocated a
policy of confrontation with Beijing since it was created in 1997 [...]
Removal of Hong Kong's status under the 1992 US-Hong Kong Policy Act, a law that
gives the former British colony preferential treatment separate from the
mainland on key matters, including export controls and other trade and political
issues, would be devastating to its future, according to China specialists here.
Even a formal review to determine whether Hong Kong remains sufficiently
autonomous to warrant its special status under US law risks a huge loss of
confidence. "This is designed to put pressure on the Hong Kong government," said
Alan Romberg, a retired State Department expert currently with the Henry L
Stimson Center. "It represents the Hong Kong government's worst scenario," said Mike
Jendrzejczyk, veteran China-watcher at Human Rights Watch. The group's recommendation to Bush is laid out in a letter that was posted on
its website on November 25 and is signed by 42 other mostly well-known figures,
in addition to Kristol and Kagan. It was co-sponsored by the US Committee on
Hong Kong headed by former US attorney general Dick Thornburgh, who also signed
it. (Click here: http://www.newamericancentury.org/Bushletter-112602.htm for the
full text of the letter.) [...]
Charter members of PNAC include top officials in the Bush administration,
including Cheney and his top national-security aide, I Lewis Libby; Defense
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and his top civilian appointees, including Deputy
Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz; Undersecretary for Policy Douglas Feith; and
assistant secretary of defense for international security affairs Peter Rodman.
Other prominent PNAC alumni in the administration include top National Security
Council staff, such as Elliott Abrams and Zalmay Khalilzad; and Undersecretary
of State for Arms Control and International Security John Bolton. The
president's brother, Florida Governor Jeb Bush, and the head of Rumsfeld's
Defense Policy Board, Richard Perle, whose office is based at AEI, are also
active in the group. While a strong majority of signers of the Hong Kong letter are neo-conservative
or more traditional Republicans like Cheney and Rumsfeld, PNAC also
recruited a number of individuals considered at the center or left of the
political spectrum to sign the letter. Among them were Robert Edgar, the head of the National Council of Churches of
Christ; former Democratic congressman Sam Gejdensen, the Clinton
administration's top human-rights official; Yale international-law Professor
Harold Hongju Koh, former assistant secretary of state for democracy, human
rights and labor; HRW founder Robert L Bernstein; former Democratic senator Paul
Simon; the head of the American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial
Organizations (AFL-CIO) labor-union confederation, John Sweeney; and Harvard
China expert Merle Goldman. The national-security legislation to which the PNAC letter objects refers to the
"Proposals to Implement Article 23 of the Basic Law" released by the Hong Kong
government on September 25. After three months of public discussion and
consultation, the proposals are supposed to be finalized for formal submission
to the Legislative Council (Legco). The Basic Law is Hong Kong's
mini-constitution. The proposed legislation for Article 23, which was put off for five years
precisely because of its political sensitivity, is supposed to cover crimes of
treason, secession, sedition and subversion against the central government in
Beijing which treats it as a Special Administrative Region (SAR) under the "one
country, two systems" formula agreed on by Britain and China. As submitted in September, the proposals have been assailed by human-rights
groups, labor unions, and democracy activists who have argued that they go too
far in restricting fundamental freedoms and in surrendering control over key
areas to Beijing. Among the provisions that have provoked the most concern are those that provide
police with broad new search powers, prohibit groups in Hong Kong from
supporting organizations proscribed under Chinese law for "endangering state
security", and criminalize as state secrets (with a five-year prison term) the
exposure of information on relations between China and Hong Kong. The document also defines treason or attempts to overthrow mainland China's
system of government not only in terms of acts of violence but also of "other
serious unlawful means" and applies it to foreigners for their acts while in
Hong Kong, according to Jendrzejczyk. While some safeguards against abuse of these provisions are built into to the
proposals, HRW and other human-rights groups note Beijing's previous
interference with Hong Kong's judicial system and suggest that the same could
happen under Article 23. Britain and the United States have also expressed
concerns about the proposals, and Bush himself was reported to have raised some
of them in his October 25 meeting with Chinese President Jiang Zemin. While acknowledging that the Hong Kong government has taken to heart some of
these concerns in part by crafting language to ensure that international
human-rights standards will remain in force, the State Department said on
November 21 that a number of specific provisions should be clarified or
reviewed. It specified the lack of appropriate oversight in the exercise of
emergency powers; uncertainty about the parameters of "unlawful disclosure" of
state secrets; new restrictions on foreign political organizations in Hong Kong;
and the proposed extension of subversion-related offenses to permanent
residents, whether inside or outside Hong Kong without regard to their
nationality. "We believe there should be an opportunity for the fullest possible consultation
on the draft legislation; effective consultation and public confidence requires
the early release of the actual language for public deliberation," the State
Department said. [...] The PNAC letter, however, suggests that just about any laws in Hong Kong
regarding treason, subversion and sedition against Beijing would represent an
unacceptable threat to Hong Kong's freedoms and autonomy. "This danger exists even if these laws are narrowly drawn because of the broader
political context in which they will operate," the letter states in apparent
opposition to Chan's views. "Hong Kong's legislature is not fully democratic,
its chief executive is chosen by Beijing, and the independence of its courts is
limited. "In brief, these new laws will be enforced in an environment in which the
appropriate political and legal checks and balances do not exist, and under the
influence of a regime with a record of using national security laws to punish
advocates of political and religious freedom," the letter states. The letter then turns to the US-Hong Kong Policy Act under which the president
is "empowered to determine whether Hong Kong is sufficient autonomous to merit
... privileged treatment". "With the enactment of the proposed national-security laws, it would be
impossible to credibly maintain that Hong Kong enjoys the high degree of
autonomy and the rights and freedoms it was promised on its reversion to China,"
the letter states, adding that Washington should "make clear that the adoption
of restrictive laws would trigger a review of Hong Kong's special status under
the US-Hong Kong Policy Act". [...]
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/China/DL05Ad03.html Posting date: 12/8/2002
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