Los Angeles Times: Hong Kong's Eroding Rights
Opinion; Editorial Pages Desk; Editorials 07/14/2002 Five years after Britain's handover of its colony of Hong Kong to China, the sky has not fallen.
Fears of soldiers in the streets and a repressive dictatorship dismantling residents' rights proved
overwrought. But disquieting developments raise concerns about the erosion of civil liberties under
the formula known as "one country, two systems." Much blame falls on Tung Chee-hwa, the former shipping magnate whom China selected as the
territory's chief executive. Civil rights advocates criticize Tung for being overly subservient to
China. Nor has he been aided by the recent downturn in the economy, a major concern in an enclave
where businesspeople have always been powerful. Even before taking office July 1, 1997, Tung warned that some freedoms might be sacrificed. In
1999, Hong Kong refused to let Pope John Paul II visit. Last year, the territory refused entry to
scores of Falun Gong [practitioners] from abroad, even though the spiritual movement was legal in
Hong Kong. The ban coincided with the visit of President Jiang Zemin of China; Falun Gong is
outlawed there. Recently, Tung picked 14 heads of government divisions in what he billed as an attempt to improve
accountability. But the accountability will be only to him, not to voters or legislators; his
selectees are unlikely to be as independent-minded as the British-style civil servants who served
Hong Kong well for many years. Tung's lack of popularity with residents, as measured by polls, did
not stand in the way of his being given a second five-year term by 800 electors cued by Beijing. He
had no opposition. Hong Kong residents deserve better than the exchange of one colonial master for another. The
constitutional implication of free elections in 2007 seems unlikely to be fulfilled, especially
after the comment of a Chinese deputy prime minister this month that Hong Kong's main need was
"stability." The cars and delivery trucks packing Hong Kong's streets and the supertankers in the crowded
harbors can disguise economic problems that are real and threatening. Shanghai could surpass the
territory commercially in a decade or so if it continues to improve infrastructure and emphasize
technology and if Hong Kong fritters away advantages that include more freedom for residents and
businesses. Stopping the erosion of civil liberties would reassure investors that Hong Kong remains a good
place to invest; more important, it would preserve residents' freedom after more than a century of
colonial subjugation.
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