China accuses UK of ‘gross interference’ over HK

By AFP
July 07, 2020

LONDON: Beijing´s ambassador to London on Monday accused Britain of “gross interference” in China´s internal affairs” over its response to a controversial national security law in Hong Kong. The UK government has said it will offer Hong Kong residents a broader path to citizenship in response to the sweeping new security law for the former British territory. The move could pave the way for more than three million Hong Kongers to move to Britain. But Chinese ambassador Liu Xiaoming said Beijing has expressed its “grave concern and strong opposition” to the proposals, arguing that London has “no sovereignty, jurisdiction or rights of supervision over Hong Kong”. “These moves constitute a gross interference in China´s internal affairs and openly trample on the basic norms governing international relations,” he told reporters. China last week enacted the sweeping security law for the restless city of around 7.5 million people, banning acts of subversion, secession, terrorism and collusion with foreign forces. The legislation, which has sent a wave of fear through the territory, has criminalised dissenting opinions such as calls for independence or autonomy. Britain is among the Western nations moving to offer millions of Hong Kongers refuge in response. London has said it has a duty of care to residents of a colony it handed back to China in 1997, under an agreement designed to preserve its autonomy and freedoms for 50 years.

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