AFP (Agence France-Presse): Trade unions say Hong Kong's new security laws threaten rights
Thursday, 16-Jan-2003 HONG KONG, Jan 17 (AFP) - More than 1,000 trade unionists from around the world have sent e-mails
to Hong Kong's chief warning that planned security laws threaten political and civil rights, labour
groups said. The e-mails are part of a campaign that calls on the world's trade unions to support workers in
Hong Kong in "defence of the right to organise, protest and campaign for better working
conditions and human rights," they said in statement late Thursday. These rights could be threatened by the anti-subversion laws, the Hong Kong Confederation of
Trade Unions (HKCTU) and China Labour Bulletin (CLB) said. The former British territory has been obliged since it returned to Chinese rule in 1997 to pass
laws banning treason, sedition, subversion and theft of state secrets. The HKCTU and CLB criticised China's use of its subversion laws saying Beijing used them to quell
threats to its control and Hong Kong should not be subjected to China's concept of national
security. "The subversion charges laid against Liaoyang labour activists Yao Fuxin and Xiao Yunliang
are sharp reminders of what the Chinese government sees as 'protecting national security' which is
hailed as the justification for enacting new anti-subversion laws in Hong Kong," the statement
said. The two were arrested in Liaoyang city in March following large-scale demonstrations in which
thousands of people denounced corrupt local politicians and demanded greater help for laid-off
workers. "The subversion charges are the usual 'legal' weapon that the Chinese government employs to
wipe out threats to the ruling regime," the statement said. The statement noted that an online protestor from Australia said in her e-mail to Hong Kong Chief
Executive Tung Chee-hwa: "Only fearful governments implement repressive legislation to inhibit
the rights of its citizens. What is your government afraid of?" Meanwhile, Bill Rammell, British parliamentary under-secretary at the Foreign and Commonwealth
Office, said he had told Chinese officials during a recent visit to Beijing that international
confidence in Hong Kong would be undermined if the issue were mishandled. "This is a crucial piece of legislation. The way it is handled will determine international
confidence. Our view is that there should be the widest possible consultation on the details,"
he told the South China Morning Post in Hong Kong on Thursday. However, Rammell said he was "quietly heartened" to note Hong Kong officials recognised
that more details of the proposed anti-subversion laws would be needed before the actual legislative
procedures began. "I was somewhat encouraged by what I heard that they have not ruled out further consultation
on the details before it gets to the blue bill stage," he said. "They (officials) hope that people will be pleasantly surprised when they see the content of
the legislation. But until people see the detailed legislation, there can't be that
reassurance." The proposed anti-subversion laws, set to take effect in mid-2003, have sparked widespread
concerns that basic rights will be curtailed in Hong Kong. http://www.ptd.net/webnews/wed/cp/Qhongkong-subversion.Roxd_DJH.html
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