Globe and Mail (Canada): Hong Kong's rulers tighten the leash
Monday, July 1, 2002 Page A12 When Hong Kong reverted to Chinese rule five years ago today, many predicted
that freedom of speech would be a principal casualty. Beijing's much-trumpeted
"one country, two systems" mantra would prove to be no more than camouflage for
imposing the same brand of authoritarianism that stifles dissent on the
mainland, the skeptics said. Regrettably, bit by bit, they may have been
entirely right. The newest evidence is seen in Hong Kong's decision last week to bar -- again
-- leading Chinese activist Harry Wu from the territory. A U.S. citizen and an
outspoken critic of China's atrocious human-rights record, Mr. Wu was refused a
visa that would have allowed him to address a seminar marking the anniversary
of Britain's departure from its long-time colony. Other undesired political and
religious activists have been arrested, harassed or excluded in recent months,
and the island's chief executive, Tung Chee-hwa, who was not required to stand
for election once he had received Beijing's endorsement, has tightened the laws
that regulate political demonstrations. Next on the horizon is new
anti-subversion legislation. One target in this incremental crackdown is the Falun Gong spiritual movement
-- even though it remains technically legal in Hong Kong. Sixteen Falun Gong
practitioners, including four Swiss nationals, are currently on trial on
charges of causing a public disturbance and, last week, an elderly U.S.-based
member of the group was turned back from the Hong Kong airport and bundled on
to a return flight wrapped in a tarpaulin. Mr. Tung, meanwhile, has announced the territory's biggest administrative
shakeup since he took charge, proclaiming that his new lineup of handpicked
ministers signaled "a new era of open, enlightened and progressive
government." If only. Unchanged, and unlikely to change, is the fact that only
24 members of Hong Kong's 60-seat Legislative Council are directly elected,
with the rest chosen by a committee that reports to Beijing. The system works
well and should be left intact, Chinese Vice-Premier Qian Qichen told the South
China Morning Post recently. The same cannot be said of Hong Kong's economy. Unemployment is running at 7.5
per cent, a record high, accompanied by deflation that has now lasted almost
four years. Struggling with a huge budget deficit, authorities are seeking to
cut the pay of the territory's 200,000 civil servants, whose mood is
rebellious. The immediate test of Hong Kong's stability, however, will occur today, with
several large anti-Tung protests called to mark the anniversary. Information
Minister Stephen Lam has assured residents that law and order will be
maintained and that police "will monitor the situation closely." Mr. Lam
undoubtedly means what he says. Where to from here? The prognosis does not look good. Former British prime
minister Margaret Thatcher is unlikely to acknowledge it, after her rosy
forecasts at the time of the handover, but "one country, one system" looks to
be the formula that best defines Hong Kong's future. http://www.globeandmail.com/servlet/GIS.Servlets.HTMLTemplate?current_row=11&tf=tgam/search/tgam/SearchFullStory.html&cf=tgam/search/tgam/SearchFullStory.cfg&configFileLoc=tgam/config&encoded_keywords=hong+kong&option=&start_row=11&start_row_offset1=0&num_rows=1&search_results_start=11
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