The Seattle Times: The people speak, and win, in Hong Kong
September 10, 2003 Editorial Hong Kong's Beijing-appointed governor has withdrawn the National Security
Ordinance that prompted 500,000 people to take to the streets July 1. The
withdrawal is a victory for the 6 million Hong Kong people and, in the long run,
for the people of China. The bill defined and forbade treason, subversion, secession, sedition and
seditious publication. It allowed police to kick down a citizen's door without a
warrant if these crimes were believed to be applicable. And it allowed groups to
be banned in Hong Kong if they were "subordinate to" groups banned in
China, or "connected" to them. Part of this was clearly aimed at the Falun Gong, a religious group banned in
China. It also worried others, including the Catholics, whose church does not
operate freely in China. Hong Kong authorities assured the people the law was reasonable. Part of it
was, but part of it was not. Before this, the Hong Kong people never stood up for themselves politically.
For most of the time the British ruled, the people had neither a public vote nor
political parties. In 1989, when China cracked down on student protesters in
Beijing, the Hong Kong people turned out in huge demonstrations, but it was not
against their government. This year it was. This year they stood up for
themselves, and demanded their rulers bow to them. That bow just took place
after a face-saving two months' delay. Probably not too many Americans heard about it, but by now, a few hundred
million people in China have. It is a good omen for the new century. http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/text/2001721557_honged10.html
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