China's parliament passed a resolution to develop legislation to “safeguard national security” in Hong Kong. Beijing will entirely bypass the local legislature in Hong Kong and implant the notorious “national security law” here. The act and the law together, aim to crack down on the momentum of the democratic movement built up since June 2019.Taking advantage of the global pandemic it created, Beijing commences a series of incurious descent on Hong Kong’s autonomy while the world’s hands are tied by the virus. In April, it attempted to institutionalize “supervisory power” of China’s Liaison Office. Now, Beijing further tightens its grip over the city by circumventing the Legislative Council of Hong Kong, inserting the national security law directly into Annex III of the Basic law, then it will be immediately effective after it is promulgated by the Hong Kong government.
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Beijing, amid the virus, is desperate to have Hong Kong fully under control. As its propaganda massively backfired and Taiwan is increasingly receiving global praise, it finds itself no longer able to maintain its influence under the new cold war. Hong Kong, being its channel for foreign funds and investments, is of vital strategic importance under such dynamics. Yet, to Beijing’s dismay, Hong Kong-ers have demonstrated repeatedly their reluctance to comply with its dictatorship since the handover, especially during the movement last year.Implementing the national security law is an act to retaliate on the movement, to dissolve its main components: street protests, local electoral institutions, and international advocacy efforts. Beijing targets protestors and electoral candidates, and attempts to cut Hong Kong off from support from the international community.All protests and other calls for democracy in the city, regardless of their nature, will be classified as attempts to subvert China's authority: activists who have participated in advocacy for international support will be barred from elections or imprisoned; local and international non-governmental organisations may be subject to prosecution; criticism against China will be conceived as successive acts; dissenters and human rights defenders may be arrested in secret by the new national security body in the city.This law works towards ripping out all democratic aspirations in Hong Kong.
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The price to pay
The world can no longer afford an unprincipled and failed “change for trade policy” towards China. The International community has consistently prioritized trade with China over other enlightened interests, like democracy and human rights, ignoring horrible deeds Beijing has systematically committed : incarcerating 1.5 million Uyghurs and Kazakhs in internment and labour camps, covering-up details on COVID-19, threatening Taiwan with military annexation, and suppressing Hong Kong’s democracy movement.The world should have slowly come to realise that the current attitude to China endangers world peace, security and public health – this is the high price for appeasing and being overly dependent on China. The time has come to ask if such a regime is still to be actively supported.
The world must free itself from the illusion that China will liberalize and democratize itself because of economic growth and corporations' pockets filled with Chinese money through trade. China has violated the Joint Declaration, and broken international law – expecting China to abide by therules and trade fairly is overly optimistic and close to naïve.
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