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HK pro-democracy MPs resign

Thursday, 12 November 2020


HONG KONG, Nov 11 (BBC): All of Hong Kong's pro-democracy lawmakers have resigned after four of their colleagues were disqualified.
On Wednesday Beijing passed a resolution allowing the city's government to disqualify politicians deemed a threat to national security.
Shortly afterwards Hong Kong Democratic Party chairman Wu Chi-wai told reporters that they would all leave the city's legislature.
"We... will stand with our colleagues who are disqualified," he said.
BBC China correspondent Stephen McDonnell says this means for the first time since Hong Kong was handed back to China in 1997 its legislative body - already stacked in favour of the pro-Beijing-camp -now has virtually no dissenting voices at all.
The territory's leader, Chief Executive Carrie Lam, is pro-Beijing and is supported by the central government there.
The move is being seen as the latest attempt by China to restrict Hong Kong's freedoms.
China introduced a controversial and far-reaching national security law in Hong Kong in late June, which criminalised "secession, subversion and collusion with foreign forces".
The law was introduced after years of pro-democracy and anti-Beijing protests. It has already led to several arrests of activists and has largely silenced protesters.
In response to the security law - passed in response to months of pro-democracy protests - the UK has offered a route to British citizenship to residents still holding a British National Overseas (BNO) passport.
Around 300,000 people currently hold BNO passports, while an estimated 2.9 million people born before the handover are eligible for it.
China last month strongly criticised the UK in response, telling London to "immediately correct its mistakes".
Hong Kong - formerly a British colony - was returned to China in 1997 under the "one country, two systems" principle, which allowed it to retain more rights and freedoms than the mainland until 2047.
The new resolution passed by China's National People's Congress Standing Committee says that lawmakers should be disqualified if they support Hong Kong independence, refuse to acknowledge China's sovereignty, ask foreign forces to interfere in the city's affairs or in other ways threaten national security.
It also allows the Hong Kong government to directly remove lawmakers without having to approach the courts.
Moments after that resolution passed, four lawmakers - Alvin Yeung, Kwok Ka-ki and Dennis Kwok of the Civic Party and Kenneth Leung of the Professionals Guild - were disqualified.
All four of them are considered moderates and they have never supported Hong Kong independence.
The city's pro-democracy legislators have 19 seats in the 70-seat legislature. Within hours of their disqualification, the remaining 15 announced they would resign en masse.
The four men were among 12 legislators who were earlier barred from standing in a legislative election before the polls were postponed to next year.
The group had called on US officials to sanction those responsible for alleged human rights abuses in Hong Kong.
The Chinese government and its surrogates in Carrie Lam's administration have - in recent times - used specific problems as a series of excuses to introduce wholesale, draconian changes which will remain in place long after whatever hurdle it is has been cleared.
In this case, four legislators had, controversially, been ruled ineligible for the next Legislative Council election.
However, because the term of the current legislature had been extended for a year, due to a delayed vote, they had been able to remain in their existing positions.
Carrie Lam wanted them gone straight away so she says she asked Beijing to introduce a new law enabling their immediate dismissal. In reality, who knows whether Hong Kong's leader requested this move or was told it was going to happen by the Communist Party's senior leadership?