China's plans to 'improve' democracy in Hong Kong could spell the end of the city's opposition
Hong Kong (CNN)As members of China's political elite prepared for an annual summit in Beijing this week, state-run news agency Xinhua noted "there is no perfect democracy, only democracy that fits best."
Hong Kong may be about to find out the democracy that fits best, at least in Beijing's opinion, is no democracy at all.
At
the opening of the two sessions -- the twin meetings of the Chinese
People's Political Consultative Committee (CPPCC) and the National
People's Congress (NPC) -- Thursday, Zhang Yesui, the NPC spokesman,
said recent unrest in Hong Kong "showed that the electoral system needs
to be improved" in order to ensure "patriots govern."
Speaking Friday,
Wang Chen, vice chairman of the NPC Standing Committee, said changes
would affect both the Legislative Council, Hong Kong's already only
semi-democratic parliament, and how the city chooses its chief
executive.
The
Election Committee, a Beijing-dominated body which currently chooses
Hong Kong's leader, will be expanded, likely diluting the influence of
any pro-democracy members, and will also be given the power to nominate
all candidates for the legislature, as well as "electing a relatively
large share of Legislative Council members," Wang said.
The
proposed moves come after a new loyalty oath was proposed for all Hong
Kong elected officials -- from local councilors to legislators -- that
could be used to bar almost all democrats, with China's top
representative in the city saying that "patriotism" in Beijing's eyes
means not just loyalty to China, but loyalty to the Communist Party.
"For
years, anti-China forces seeking to disrupt Hong Kong have been
colluding with external forces in an attempt to seize the jurisdiction
over Hong Kong, with clear goals and concrete actions," Xinhua said in a
commentary
Friday. "Effective measures must be taken to block these pawns of
anti-China forces from being elected to (Hong Kong's) governance
architecture, and knock them out once and for all."
Not
that there are many figures left to challenge Beijing: most prominent
Hong Kong opposition politicians are being held in jail, where they are awaiting trial on
subversion charges related to a primary election last year, which the
government claimed was illegal and contrary to national security.
That
pre-trial jail time could be a mere precursor to a much longer
sentence: the national security law, imposed on the city by the Chinese
central government last year, carries a potential life sentence for
"grave" offenses of subversion, while those found guilty of lesser
offenses can get between three and 10 years in prison.
Speaking
after bail hearings for the 47 defendants involved in the case this
week, Chan Ho-wun, convenor of Hong Kong's Civil Human Rights Front, one
of the organizers of the city's massive pro-democracy street
demonstrations in 2019, said the government had "lost all conscience."
"This
is a coup, this is subverting people's choices," Chan said. "We hope
the government can immediately respond to people's demands."
In
the year since it was introduced, the security law has gutted
opposition politics in Hong Kong, stifling protests and public displays
of dissent, sending activists into exile, and seeing dozens of prominent
figures -- and those not so prominent -- arrested and facing
significant prison terms.
Hong Kong's de facto constitution, the Basic Law,
which sets out the "one country, two systems" policy that has governed
the semi-autonomous city since its handover from British to Chinese rule
in 1997, states both the city's leader and its legislature should
eventually be elected "by universal suffrage."
This
"ultimate aim" as it is described in the Basic Law has long seemed like
a distant goal, one that is growing ever more unattainable.
Speaking this month, the city's former leader CY Leung denounced
the city's opposition and said Hong Kong's autonomy and freedoms are
all dependent on Beijing, and therefore can be whatever Beijing chooses.
"In
Hong Kong the extra autonomous power that we enjoy actually comes from
Beijing, and Beijing has to account to all the 1.4 billion people in the
whole of China," he said. "Ignoring the sentiments of the mainland
people is self-deception on the part of Hong Kong."
He
added that "by pushing on the democracy envelope too far, and by
attempting to chip away the authority of Beijing in, for example,
appointing the chief executive, many of the so-called democrats have
become, in practice, separatists."
In
a separate interview with Reuters, Leung did not rule out returning to
office, saying "I am among millions of Hong Kong people who are
eligible" to be the next Chief Executive.
But
as Beijing's recent moves demonstrate, while millions may be eligible,
the number of Hong Kongers who China's leaders trust to actually wield
power is vanishingly small, and shrinking by the day.
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