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Wall Street Journal: Just Another Chinese City By MARTIN LEE
December 31, 2002 HONG KONG -- Five years after Hong Kong's handover, China's curtain is
closing over our once free society. At Beijing's directive, Hong Kong's
government has unveiled controversial new measures on "treason, subversion,
sedition, and secession." Such vague laws are used in mainland China to convict
and imprison everyone from Internet entrepreneurs to journalists to academics.
In Asia's competitive financial environment, Beijing's move could constitute a
mortal blow to Hong Kong's delicate free society.
Why the move to smother civil society in Hong Kong now? Orders from Beijing.
Last July, Qian Qichen, the deputy prime minister responsible for Hong Kong
affairs, marked the anniversary of Hong Kong's handover to China by declaring
that anti-subversion laws should be implemented immediately. Despite
unprecedented opposition, including from local and international business,
religious, media and human rights groups, Hong Kong's Beijing-appointed
government plans to rush forward legislation in early 2003.
The subversion law directly contravenes the Sino-British Joint Declaration,
the pre-handover treaty guaranteeing all Hong Kong's freedoms -- including press
freedom, religious freedom, and freedom of association -- would continue for 50
years, not a mere five. But the Chinese government has been clever: the
spotlight once on Hong Kong has shifted, and few outside the territory have
reacted to the subversion law with appropriate alarm. The most immediate threats
are to press and religious freedom.
Today, Hong Kong has the most vibrant press in Asia, with some 35 daily
newspapers. Although self-censorship has increased dramatically since 1997,
brave journalists continue to report news from Hong Kong and developments in
China. The new law dealing with the "Theft of State Secrets" and publishing of
"unauthorized" news could affect both Hong Kong and overseas reporters. Anyone
publishing so-called seditious material could be jailed for five years. Hong
Kong's security chief stated publicly that Chinese officials' views will even be
taken into account when deciding whether to prosecute the media.
Of course, even before the law is passed, the first tangible effect will be a
chill in reporting any sensitive information at all, including financial
information -- such as about China's many state-owned enterprises. As for
religious freedom, this law that appears targeted at the Falun Gong could well
end up stifling other religious groups. Catholic Church leader Bishop Joseph Zen
has confirmed that the Hong Kong Catholic Church is linked to the underground
church in the mainland, and that they therefore are directly threatened by the
proposed anti-subversion laws.
In fact, any group that falls afoul of Beijing can easily be quashed under
Hong Kong's new law. Life was already precarious for democratic politicians,
journalists, labor and rights activists among others, and now has become more
so.
Beijing already controls our executive branch through its appointed leader,
Tung Chee-hwa, the legislature through an undemocratic electoral system, and the
judiciary through China's ability to overturn interpretations by Hong Kong's
highest court, the Court of Final Appeal. The only truly free aspect of Hong
Kong has been our robust and occasionally noisy civil society -- perhaps
explaining why it is now under threat.
President Bush has made his own views clear. At the close of his October
meeting with Chinese leader Jiang Zemin at his ranch in Texas, he called on
China to "preserve the rights of Hong Kong citizens." Absent continued
international outcry, the subversion bill will be introduced early in the new
year and fast-tracked into law by next July. Once these new laws are on the
books, no freedoms will be guaranteed, and Hong Kong could be reduced to just
another Chinese city.
Mr. Lee is the founding chairman of Hong Kong's Democratic Party.
Posting date: 1/1/2003
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