Plenty yet to be done on security law in Hong Kong, says Chinese officials
Jul 07, 2021
Hong Kong, July 7 : Claiming that the national security law imposed by Beijing on Hong Kong was a success, Chinese officials have vowed to continue to remake the former British colony stating "there is still plenty of work to be done."
"This is a long and arduous task, and there is still plenty of work to be done," Nikkei Asia quoting Chen Dong, vice director of Beijing's official representative office in the city, at a Hong Kong Department of Justice forum on the security law,
"There needs to be a clear understanding as forces that are anti-Chinese and trying to sow trouble in Hong Kong have not completely given up," he added.
Chen warned specifically about "lone wolf-type attacks" by radical elements, following an incident last week where a man stabbed a Hong Kong policeman then himself.
Chen condemned what he called the "beautification" of such events by parties with ulterior motives, including foreign forces "rashly and wantonly interfering in Hong Kong's affairs."
Neither Chen nor other Chinese officials hinted at what more may come.
Hong Kong authorities on June 6 said they have arrested nine people, including six high school students, for allegedly plotting to bomb train stations court buildings and tunnels.
The Hong Kong police said the terror plots were planned by advocates for the city's independence from China, CNN reported.
The past month has seen Apple Daily, one of the city's top-selling newspapers, forced to close after the arrest of top managers and the freezing of its bank accounts based on alleged security law violations, as well as the launch of security law-based movie censorship, the disbanding of groups for pro-democracy lawyers and doctors and the detention of residents for "seditious stickers" and banners outside their homes.
About 120 people have been arrested under the security law since it came into effect on June 30, 2020, instituting penalties of up to life imprisonment for separatism, subversion, terrorism and collusion with foreign forces.
Chow Hang Tung, a vice-chair for the non-profit Hong Kong Alliance, was also arrested on June 30 for inciting illegal assembly, which was scheduled to take place July 1.
She was also arrested June 4 for the same charge, Voice of America reported quoting Richard Tsoi, the group's secretary-general.
Zheng Yanxiong, director of the Office for Safeguarding National Security, an agency set up last year to implement the new law, linked the city's security situation with Chinese President Xi Jinping's long-term strategic agenda at Monday's forum.
"Safeguarding national security in Hong Kong is precisely the bottom line that we absolutely cannot yield in the road to the great revival of the Chinese race," he said, Nikkei Asia further reported.
He alleged Western governments have been seeking to "block the great revival of the Chinese race" and "inspire a Hong Kong version of colour revolution," referring to the popular uprisings that toppled several authoritarian regimes in the Middle East a decade ago.
Speaking later at the forum, Hong Kong officials vowed to do their part.
"We need to work hard to suppress local terrorists and to fundamentally remove any threats," said Chief Secretary John Lee, a former police officer who previously headed the city's Security Bureau.
"We must think ahead and be preemptive to prevent any acts that endanger national security," he added, saying that last week's stabbing incident showed "risks to national security are lurking."
Secretary of Security Chris Tang agreed that officials "must not lower our guard when it comes to protecting national security," warning of those who "continue to abuse the media, arts and cultural forces to spread their ideologies."
He made no mention of specific further actions, but along with Lee, Tang, then police commissioner, helped lead last month's drive against Apple Daily. He, however, criticized those "using journalism to work with foreign forces to threaten national security."