Hong Kong body will play an advisory role: China’s political advisory body

The city’s government will retain enforcement powers, says key Chinese official.

May 27, 2020 11:20 pm | Updated 11:21 pm IST

On high alert: Riot police standing guard as a woman tries to cross the street in Hong Kong on Wednesday.

On high alert: Riot police standing guard as a woman tries to cross the street in Hong Kong on Wednesday.

A proposed security law could allow Chinese mainland authorities to set up shop in Hong Kong, but their powers would likely be restricted to intelligence gathering and an advisory role, a member of China’s top political advisory body said Wednesday.

China’s rubber-stamp Parliament is expected to approve on Thursday a proposal to draft a national security law for the semi-autonomous city, which has sparked fresh protests over fears the financial hub will lose its unique freedoms.

British-era agency

Daniel Fung, Hong Kong member of the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference, said the idea is to establish a security agency similar to one that existed when the city was a British colony. “I would expect the powers and duties of this agency to be restricted to intelligence gathering, and playing an advisory role,” Mr. Fung said, while noting its exact functions will have to be set out under the legislation that will be passed at a later date. Enforcement of laws, he added, should remain with the Hong Kong government under the proposal, which would ban secession, subversion, terrorism and foreign interference. Hong Kong has its own legal system and a degree of autonomy through the “ One Country, Two Systems ” arrangement under which Britain handed Hong Kong back to China in 1997.

Under the city’s mini-constitution, local police are responsible for law enforcement but mainland police officials are allowed to operate within the territory. Activists fear the new proposals will end this firewall.

Last year’s mass unrest against the government was triggered by a now-scrapped proposal to allow extraditions to the mainland, which many worried would leave Hong Kong citizens at the mercy of China's opaque justice system.

No transfer of suspects

Mr. Fung, however, said he did not see that happening under the new proposal.

“We do not expect the transfer of suspects to the mainland for trial,” he said.

Mainland Chinese authorities could join Hong Kong police to investigate criminal suspects under the planned security law, pro-Beijing politician Maria Tam had earlier said. But according to Ms. Tam, who advises China’s Parliament on Hong Kong’s Constitution, police from outside the city would need approval from local authorities to conduct investigations.

The move has prompted U.S. president Donald Trump to warn that Hong Kong might lose its status as a global financial centre if the city’s freedoms and vaunted judicial independence are swept aside.

Hong Kong's unpopular chief executive, Carrie Lam, said Tuesday that essential freedoms would remain.

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