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posted by martyb on Thursday November 21 2019, @09:31PM   Printer-friendly
from the courting-disaster? dept.

Arthur T Knackerbracket has found the following story:

China says its courts trump Hong Kong's on face mask ruling

China's top legislature has insisted Hong Kong courts had no power to rule on the constitutionality of legislation under the city's Basic Law, as it condemned a decision by the high court to overturn a ban on face masks worn by pro-democracy protesters.

The statement on Tuesday came a day after the high court ruled that the face mask ban - introduced through colonial-era emergency laws - was unconstitutional.

[...] "Whether the laws of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region comply with the Basic Law of Hong Kong can only be judged and decided by the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress," Yan Tanwei, a spokesman for the Legislative Affairs Commission of the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress, said in a statement.

"No other authority has the right to make judgments and decisions," he added.

[...] Protests started in June with rallies that brought hundreds of thousands of people onto the streets in a largely peaceful call for the withdrawal of a now-withdrawn bill that would have allowed suspected criminals to be extradited to mainland China for trial.

They have since evolved into a series of demands for greater democracy and freedoms as well as an independent inquiry into alleged police brutality. Protesters worry China is encroaching on the freedoms given to Hong Kong when the United Kingdom returned the territory to China under what was known as "one country, two systems" in 1997.

[...] China has repeatedly warned that it would not allow the city to spiral into total chaos, heightening concerns that Beijing might deploy troops or other security forces to quell the unrest.

"The Hong Kong government is trying very hard to put the situation under control," China's ambassador to Britain, Liu Xiaoming, said on Monday.

"But if the situation becomes uncontrollable, the central government would certainly not sit on our hands and watch. We have enough resolution and power to end the unrest."

[...] Protesters had been using masks to hide their identities in public. The proposal was widely criticised by supporters of the anti-government movement, who saw it as a risk to demonstrators.

Hong Kong's High Court ruled on Monday that colonial-era emergency laws, which were revived to justify the mask ban, were "incompatible with the Basic Law", the mini-constitution under which Hong Kong was returned to China.

Will China run out of patience with Hong Kong protests?


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  • (Score: 2) by Phoenix666 on Thursday November 21 2019, @10:31PM (1 child)

    by Phoenix666 (552) on Thursday November 21 2019, @10:31PM (#923186) Journal

    Beijing has a track record of crushing dissent, so things don't bode well for the HK protesters there. But if Beijing does get medieval on the city, they will be killing the goose that laid the golden egg. They would lose a crazy amount of face.

    --
    Washington DC delenda est.
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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday November 22 2019, @09:54AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday November 22 2019, @09:54AM (#923355)

    This isn't really true anymore. Hong Kong is a worldwide economic center, but not especially relevant to China's economy.

        - Hong Kong GDP = $0.373 trillion
        - China GDP = $14.2 trillion.

    This is no doubt part of what is causing some agitation. China's developing at a rate like no country ever before. Hong Kong has also been developing, and not even at an especially poor rate. Yet when you plot the GDP of Hong Kong vs China, the slope of progress is so stark that Hong Kong essentially looks like it's in stagnation.

    I think this is why they've also been relatively content to let the protesters destroy the city and its economy just to turn opinion against them. China values assimilating Hong Kong (which the protesters paradoxically make easier) far more than the economic value of the city.