Chicago Tribune: The people win in Hong Kong
September 10, 2003
China holds up Hong Kong as an example to the world--and especially to
Taiwan--about how "one country, two systems" can work. Communism and
democracy can coexist, it insists.
China probably would rather have skipped the vigorous display of people's
democracy that recently forced Hong Kong's leader to dump a Draconian domestic
security measure--but there is no better display for the world to see. If a
measure of freedom is surviving in Hong Kong, it is because the people there
insist on it.
They protested an infringement on their cherished civil liberties.
Surprisingly, the local government was forced to back down. Beijing remained
silent, at least in public.
Hong Kong's Basic Law, the constitution that has governed its status as a
special administrative region of China since the British relinquished control
six years ago, requires that it pass an internal security law. It says nothing,
though, about when that must be done.
Hong Kong's chief executive, Tung Chee-hwa, attempted to ram through a deeply
unpopular version of a security law this summer. The proposed law sent chills
through Hong Kong. It threatened free speech, free association and Hong Kong's
free-wheeling press, and gave the government sweeping powers, including
warrantless searches.
It would have allowed the government to banish local groups that are
affiliated with mainland organizations that have been banned in China. The
prime, though not the only, example would have been Falun Gong, banned as a cult
on the mainland but free in Hong Kong.
Hong Kong's citizens took to the streets. Half a million people--nearly 10
percent of the population--staged a demonstration on July 1. That was the
largest gathering since the 1989 pro-democracy movement, which was ultimately
crushed by Beijing in Tiananmen Square.
There were other rallies during the month. Faced with a huge public revolt,
the government first attempted to make the anti-subversive law more palatable.
But, in the end, it bowed to the will of the people and withdrew it altogether.
This battle is far from over. Tung's decision to withdraw the anti-subversion
measure was a response to the popular will, but it was also a tactical move. His
government's popularity was dropping like a rock because of the measure and it
must face the voters in elections next summer. The internal security law, in one
form or another, will likely resurface.
But Hong Kong's summer of discontent and the response of authorities there
and in Beijing speaks volumes about the historic--and delicate--transformation
going on in the world's most populous country.
Economic liberalization over the last quarter century has raised living
standards and is raising expectations about political liberalization. China's
new president, Hu Jintao, who is also head of the Communist Party, faces the
difficult task of trying to satisfy those rising expectations while keeping the
party in control. Communism and democracy may be coexisting--but the people of
Hong Kong have firmly declared that the latter has a brighter future.
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/opinion/chi-0309100060sep10,1,361922.story
Yearly Archive
Printer Version
feedback@clearwisdom.net