China’s new Hong Kong laws a “flagrant breach” of agreement, foreign officials say

Malcolm Rifkind (left) and Chris Patten
Malcolm Rifkind (left) and Chris Patten

WASHINGTON, (Reuters) – Nearly 200 political figures from around the world today decried Beijing’s proposed national security laws for Hong Kong, including 17 U.S. Congress members, as international tensions grow over the proposal to set up Chinese government intelligence bases in the territory.

In a joint statement organized by former Hong Kong Governor Christopher Patten and former British Foreign Secretary Malcolm Rifkind, 186 law and policy leaders said the proposed laws are a “comprehensive assault on the city’s autonomy, rule of law and fundamental freedoms” and a “flagrant breach” of the Sino-British Joint Declaration that returned Hong Kong to China in 1997.

“If the international community cannot trust Beijing to keep its word when it comes to Hong Kong, people will be reluctant to take its word on other matters,” they wrote.

The legislation comes as the relationship between Washington and Beijing frays, with U.S. President Donald Trump blaming China for the coronavirus pandemic.

U.S. officials have said the Chinese legislation would be bad for both Hong Kong’s and China’s economies and could jeopardize the territory’s special status in U.S. law. China, though, has dismissed other countries’ complaints as meddling.

Some of Trump’s fellow Republicans – Senator Marco Rubio, acting chair of the Intelligence Committee, and Senator Ted Cruz – signed the statement. Democratic signatories included Representative Eliot Engel, head of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, and Adam Schiff, chairman of the U.S. House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence.

Forty-four members of Britain’s House of Commons and eight members of its House of Lords also signed the statement, alongside figures from across Europe, Asia, Australia and North America.