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AFP: Next Hong Kong Catholic head vows to protect religious freedoms Saturday, 21-Sep-2002
HONG KONG, Sept 22 (AFP) - The next leader of Hong Kong's Catholic diocese
has pledged to protect religious and human rights in the territory and hit out
at efforts by the "leaderless" government to court Beijing's approval, a report
said Sunday.
Bishop Joseph Zen Ze-kiun, 70, a vocal critic of the government, added the
Church would do its utmost to protect the "one country, two systems" agreement
which had guaranteed the former British colony 50 years of autonomy on its
reversion to Chinese rule in 1997.
In an interview with the Sunday Morning Post, Bishop Zen said Hong Kong was
peddling backwards in terms of human rights, citing the slow pace of democracy
and the contentious right-of-abode issue as examples.
"We do not want to see Hong Kong becoming like any other city in the
mainland," he said.
"If other kinds of freedom are in danger, we are going to lose religious
freedom very soon. So we have to speak out at once if we see any freedom being
jeopardised."
He said the Church's mission was to speak out against social injustice and it
was not his personal agenda, but rather one established by the Vatican and
followed by Cardinal John Baptist Wu Cheng-chung, 77, who has been receiving
treatment for bone marrow cancer and is expected to be succeeded by Bishop Zen
at any time.
Bishop Zen's comments come as the government contemplates accelerating moves
toward enacting controversial anti-subversion laws in the territory.
Under the Basic Law, Hong Kong's mini-constitution, the government is obliged
to enact laws prohibiting treason, sedition, subversion, secession and the theft
of state secrets.
Senior Chinese officials led by Vice Premier Qian Qichen, who is responsible
for Hong Kong affairs, have told the territory to enact the subversion law as
soon as possible.
But some legislators fear such laws could run counter to Hong Kong's policies
on freedom of speech and have argued that prohibition of treason and subversion
are covered by existing legislation.
Bishop Zen had strong criticism for Chief Executive Tung Chee-hwa and his
officials, saying Hong Kong was effectively "leaderless" and accused them of
having done many "stupid things" to please Beijing.
"This toadying culture will destroy Hong Kong. It means people have to do
something that the government likes and what Beijing likes," he warned.
Bishop Zen, who has been critical of the government's right-of-abode policy
in which thousands of mainland Chinese who lost the right to live here were sent
back to China causing many families to split, also slammed Tung for not meeting
with human right activists to discuss the issue.
However, he admitted that some inside the church disliked his outspoken
style.
The Catholic diocese has more than 230,000 followers in Hong Kong.
Cardinal Wu is the fifth bishop of the Hong Kong Diocese and was appointed to
his post in 1977.
http://www.ptd.net/webnews/wed/cj/Qhongkong-church.Rd4i_CSM.html
Posting date: 9/25/2002
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