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Beijing says 'no' to open elections in Hong Kong

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HONG KONG — China’s legislature laid down strict limits on Sunday to proposed voting reforms in Hong Kong, drawing battle lines in what pro-democracy groups warned would be a deepening confrontation over clashing visions of the political future of the city and of China.

Pushing back against months of rallies calling for free, democratic elections in Hong Kong, the National People’s Congress Standing Committee set out procedural barriers for candidates for the city’s leader that would ensure Beijing remained the gatekeeper to that position and to political power over the city.

Li Fei, a deputy secretary general of the committee, told a news conference in Beijing that the nominating guidelines — including a requirement that candidates “love the country, and love Hong Kong” — would “protect the broad stability of Hong Kong now and in the future.”

The move closes one of the few avenues left for gradual political liberalization in China after a sustained campaign against dissent on the mainland this year under President Xi Jinping. In pressing its offensive in Hong Kong, Beijing has chosen a showdown with a protest movement unlike any it has ever faced on the mainland. Hong Kong’s opposition forces enjoy civil liberties denied in the rest of China and, capitalizing on those freedoms, have taken a more confrontational approach than seen before in Hong Kong.

Hong Kong opposition groups and politicians who have campaigned for unfettered voting for the city’s leader, the chief executive, said the limits set by Beijing made a mockery of the “one person, one vote” that had been promised to Hong Kong.

“After having lied to Hong Kong people for so many years, it finally revealed itself today,” said Alan Leong, a pro-democracy legislator. “Hong Kong people are right to feel betrayed. It’s certain now that the central government will be effectively appointing Hong Kong’s chief executive.”

Occupy Central, the main Hong Kong group advocating open elections, said it was planning civil disobedience protests in the city’s commercial heart. Several thousand people turned out for a rally opposing Beijing’s plan on Sunday night.

“We are no longer willing to be docile subjects,” Benny Tai, a co-founder of Occupy Central and a law lecturer at the University of Hong Kong, told the crowd. “Our hope is that people gathered here will be dauntless civil resisters. What is our hope? Our hope is that today Hong Kong has entered a new era, an era of civil disobedience, an era of resistance.”

Other groups were also preparing to protest, and the Hong Kong Federation of Students urged university students to boycott classes.

Beyond its consequences for this former British colony of 7.2 million people, the tight reins on Hong Kong politics reflect a fear among leaders in Beijing that political concessions here would ignite demands for liberalization on the mainland, a quarter-century after such hopes were extinguished on Tiananmen Square in 1989.

“They are afraid that caving in to Hong Kong would show weakness,” Minxin Pei, a professor of government at Claremont McKenna College in California, said in a telephone interview. “They believe that political weakness will encourage Hong Kong to demand more and will give opponents of the party’s rule in China great confidence to challenge the party.”

Since taking leadership of the Communist Party almost two years ago, President Xi has orchestrated intense campaigns in China against political dissent and demands for competitive democracy, civil society and a legal system beyond party control. But Hong Kong presents special challenges.

Advocates and opponents of political liberalization alike have seen Hong Kong as a potential incubator for change in China since it was returned to Chinese rule in 1997. Since then, the territory has had considerable autonomy and retained a wealth of Western-style freedoms under an arrangement known as “one country, two systems.”

The struggle over electoral change here pits the Chinese authorities and their allies in Hong Kong against an opposition that claims robust middle-class support, protections by the city’s independent judiciary and a voice in an independent, though beleaguered, news media.

“China’s two most important cities are Beijing and Hong Kong,” Hu Jia, a prominent dissident in Beijing, said in a telephone interview on Sunday. He said he had been placed under house arrest, like other dissidents, before the National People’s Congress announcement.

“In the territory controlled by the Chinese Communist Party, only Hong Kong has some space for free speech, some judicial independence, so it is a mirror for people on the mainland,” he said. “The outcome of this battle for democracy will also determine future battles for democracy for all of China.”

Chinese officials have accused Hong Kong’s democracy groups of serving as tools for subversion by Western forces seeking to chip away at party control.

Mr. Li, the legislative official, on Sunday accused them of “sowing confusion” and “misleading society” by arguing that elections for the chief executive should follow international standards. “Each country’s historical, cultural, economic, social and political conditions and circumstances are different, and so the rules formulated for elections naturally also differ,” he said.

Under current law, the chief executive is chosen by an Election Committee, whose approximately 1,200 members are selected by constituencies generally loyal to Beijing and the city’s business elite.

According to the Chinese legislature’s proposal, the leader would be chosen by popular vote starting in 2017, as promised, but candidates would first have to win an endorsement from at least half the members of a nominating committee. The composition of that committee would be based on that of the current Election Committee, according to the decision, announced at Beijing’s Great Hall of the People.

Mr. Li said that the existing committee was already “broadly representative” of the Hong Kong electorate, and so would ​furnish the right basis for a nominating committee​ in future elections, ​an assertion that Hong Kong democrats have roundly rejected.

Democracy advocates expect that the new committee, like the existing one, would exclude candidates seen as unfavorable by Beijing.

Its composition would ensure “that democrats have no chance of getting nominated,” said Michael Davis, a law professor at the University of Hong Kong. In fact, he said, it would raise the bar. Candidates have to win only one-eighth of the support of the current committee but would have to win 50 percent under the new guidelines. “As far as I can see, the government has no capacity to offer a deal the democrats will take in this,” he said.

The Chinese government fears that direct nominations would allow candidates hostile to Beijing, and it has said direct nominations would also contravene the Basic Law, the document governing Hong Kong’s relationship with the mainland.

The Hong Kong government will use the Chinese legislature’s proposal as a framework for an electoral reform bill. That bill then must win approval from the city’s 70-member Legislative Council, where the 27 democratic members could still block its passage by the required two-thirds majority.

Emily Lau, chairwoman of Hong Kong’s Democratic Party, said they would. “We will veto this revolting proposal,” she said Sunday.

But C.Y. Leung, Hong Kong’s current, pro-Beijing chief executive, said killing the bill would also kill universal suffrage.

“Five million Hong Kong people would be deprived of the voting right that they would be otherwise entitled to,” he said. “We cannot afford a standstill in our constitutional development or else the prosperity, or stability, of Hong Kong will be at stake.”

The clash in Hong Kong will be more about winning over public opinion than winning control of the crowded streets. Opinion polls show that most Hong Kong citizens support the demand for “unfiltered” electoral choice, but also that many have qualms about possible disruption from protests.

http://nytimes.com/2014/09/01/world/asia/hong-kong-elections.html?_r=0&referrer=

A bit more at link
 

akira28

Member
what else could have happened? I mean, ultimately China wants to keep Hong Kong under it's control. Allowing them more political leeway could take things out of hand. And if the people don't pushback and eventually acquiesce, that's exactly what Beijing wants.

Can HK even give China a headache?
 

tenren

Member
This was inevitable. No way Beijing would give power to HK. If they did, imagine the reaction of people on the mainland.
 

Nakho

Member
Disgusting. The Communist Party of China is one of the worst regimes of all time in the social front. Should have been buried in the 20th century.
 

kiunchbb

www.dictionary.com
Hong Kong democracy was suppose to be a message to Taiwan "See if you come back to China, everything will be just the same, except richer!"

I guess PROC realize that will never happen, Hong Kong can stop pretending to be Singapore.
 

NekoFever

Member
China only has to maintain one country, two systems until 2047. A lot can change in that time but it's interesting to see the reins tightening already.
 

Timbuktu

Member
China only has to maintain one country, two systems until 2047. A lot can change in that time but it's interesting to see the reins tightening already.

It's not going to last until then. It is pretty depressing to know the city that you knew and loved is not going to be that way anymore and there isn't anything anyone can do about it. You'd hope that China itself would improve over time, but in the past year the party has been a lot more aggressive in pushing down any dissenting voice. That's not just HK, but more of a policy wide change that has been obvious since Xi took over.
 
It's not going to last until then. It is pretty depressing to know the city that you knew and loved is not going to be that way anymore and there isn't anything anyone can do about it. You'd hope that China itself would improve over time, but in the past year the party has been a lot more aggressive in pushing down any dissenting voice. That's not just HK, but more of a policy wide change that has been obvious since Xi took over.
End of history though! Liberal democracy won!
 

tenren

Member
HK has already changed a lot for the worse. A lot of people who were once hopeful and happy with the handover are now thinking of emigrating elsewhere.
 
HK has already changed a lot for the worse. A lot of people who were once hopeful and happy with the handover are now thinking of emigrating elsewhere.

To add insult to injury, that's just going to make things worse for those left behind when those dissenting voices decide to live somewhere else.
 

Neo C.

Member
HK's only hope is to see Mainland China revolting against the party before 2047. If the party stays strong until then, things will only get worse.
 
The Commies are not into open & fair elections? I'm shocked.

synp.jpg
 

Korigama

Member
I'd guess 50 years after it returned to Chinese rule.
Correct. Seems China's gotten impatient, though.
In accordance with the "one country, two systems" principle agreed between the UK and the PRC, the socialist system of PRC would not be practised in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR), and Hong Kong's previous capitalist system and its way of life would remain unchanged for a period of 50 years until 2047. The Joint Declaration provides that these basic policies should be stipulated in the Hong Kong Basic Law and that the socialist system and socialist policies shall not be practised in HKSAR.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sino-British_Joint_Declaration
 
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