Toronto Star: Hong Kong's security-law furor
By MARTIN REGG COHN
ASIA BUREAU
Jun. 15, 2003. 01:00 AM HONG KONG - Six years after China regained sovereignty over this former British
colony, a bitter clash is taking place between the government and human-rights
activists over Hong Kong's future as an outpost of freedom. Under pressure from the mainland, Hong Kong's government intends to implement a
controversial package of national security laws early next month to deal with
treason, subversion, sedition and state secrets. Backed by strong support from pro-Beijing loyalists in Hong Kong's largely
unelected legislative council, the government seems certain of victory. But a showdown is looming over the dispute, which remained at a low boil while
people were distracted by the outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome. Now, with SARS in decline, this territory's political temperature is rising fast
over the proposals. For a territory that proudly calls itself the Special Autonomous Region of Hong
Kong, the issue of autonomy from the mainland cuts to the heart of its
international image and domestic status. Critics warn the new laws will harm Hong Kong's reputation as a protector of
human rights and scare away business investment. But Chief Executive Tung Chee-hwa insists he will not be deterred from passing
the legislation, which he considers part of the unfinished business of the
handover. Article 23 of the Basic Law, or Hong Kong's mini-constitution, stipulates that
Hong Kong must at some future point "enact laws on its own" to safeguard state
security. The provision was inserted by China after protests erupted in Hong Kong over the
1989 Tiananmen Square massacre. Suspicions toward Beijing persist: At a candlelit vigil here marking the 14th
anniversary of the June 4 bloodbath, an estimated 50,000 people turned out to
raise the alarm over Article 23. The backlash threatens to rain on a July 1 parade marking the anniversary of the
handover. Human-rights and pro-democracy activists are predicting more than 100,000 people
will take to the streets against the national security laws in what could be the
biggest political march since the mid-1997 transition to Chinese rule. "The government has ignored public opinion over Article 23 and has become the
enemy of the people," says Richard Tsoi, an organizer for the Civil Human Rights
Front, which is organizing the protest march with 40 member groups. An opinion poll released this month by the City University of Hong Kong showed
58 per cent of respondents oppose the package. Among the most controversial proposals are restrictions to be placed on
organizations deemed to be linked with those banned on the mainland, such as the
Falun Gong meditation movement [...] Sensing that the government won't be deterred, opposition politicians are
appealing for support from foreign governments, including Canada, to prevail
upon Hong Kong's leadership. Martin Lee, founder of the opposition Democratic party, has just returned from a
lobbying swing in the United States. On Friday, he met privately with Canada's consul-general in Hong Kong to press
his case. "This government is going to ignore all opposition, no matter how strong and how
cogent our arguments," Lee said in an interview before the meeting. But he added that "Tung thinks it's important for Hong Kong to remain in the
good books of foreign governments and keep its international image." Lee urged Canada to recall the 1984 Sino-British agreement to maintain Hong
Kong's independent legal and political systems for 50 years after the hand-over.
"Had you (Canada) known then that our freedom would last only six years, how
would your government have responded?" Lee asked. Canadian Consul-General Tony Burger said in a later interview that Canada is
assessing whether to make any public comments in the coming weeks. In a statement last fall, the Canadian government warned pointedly that the
proposed laws would have to conform with international rights treaties and
protect freedom of expression. What has caught many people by surprise is that an abstract debate over
political freedoms here has turned into a real-life argument about
life-and-death issues in the wake of the SARS scare. People are asking whether the national security laws, if they'd been in place,
might have deterred the local media from the aggressive reporting that helped
bring the virus to public attention. In southern China, where the virus originated, a Communist party cover-up and a
media blackout allowed the virus to spread across the border to Hong Kong and,
ultimately, to Toronto. Now, Hong Kong's experience with SARS weighs heavily on its future. If another
viral outbreak emerged on the eve of Beijing's 2008 Olympics, Lee argues, China
might declare it a "state secret" and intimidate the media into silence with the
new laws in place. "It's possible," he says, for the media "to fall afoul of the law" in such a
scenario. That threat has alarmed the Hong Kong Journalists Association, which published a
report this month warning that "draconian powers of search and seizure" will
cast a chill on local media. The group's president, Mak Yin-ting, cautions that the national security laws
"are an inducement to self-censorship; they may also irrevocably change the way
we practise journalism in Hong Kong." The government insists the national security laws will be little different from
those on the books of other Western countries that have Official Secrets acts
and outlaw treason or sedition. The difference, however, is that those countries enjoy the checks and balances
of democratic government that are not present in Hong Kong or mainland China.
Unlike Canadians, the people of Hong Kong can't turf out their government at the
next election if it tramples on civil liberties or muzzles the media. Beijing, meanwhile, is clearly running out of patience. Chinese President Hu
Jintao and his top adviser on Hong Kong affairs, Tang Jiaxuan, said this month
that Article 23 is a litmus test of national sovereignty. "How can we not do it?" Tang asked reporters on a trip to Mongolia with Hu.
"Otherwise, what's the meaning of Hong Kong's return (to China)?" Hong Kong's secretary for security, Regina Ip, also has argued that the package
is intended only to prevent the violent overthrow of the government and will not
be abused. "The entire debate illustrates a very severe clash of identity and a political
cleavage in Hong Kong," says political scientist Sonny Lo of the University of
Hong Kong. "Beijing will retain the final say on how to tackle dissidents in
Hong Kong, so the situation will be like a sword hanging over their heads." If, as expected, the bill becomes law next month, it will be "another step
toward the mainlandization of Hong Kong politics," he says. But rather than buying stability for Beijing by giving stronger police powers to
Hong Kong's government, Lo predicts that Article 23 will energize the opposition
into demanding a more democratic system here. http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pagename=thestar/Layout/Article_Type1&c=Article&cid=1052251845379&call_pageid=968332188854&col=968350060724
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