BREAKING: Hong Kong passes new security law, raising max. penalty for treason, insurrection to life in prison
Hong Kong Free Press
Hong Kong’s opposition-free legislature has unanimously passed new homegrown security legislation, making treason, insurrection and sabotage punishable by up to life in prison, and rejecting Western criticism that the law would further restrict the city’s freedoms.
Lawmakers gathered in the Legislative Council (LegCo) Chamber on Tuesday to vote on the Safeguarding National Security Bill, just days after a draft was introduced to the legislature. All 89 legislators voted in favour of the bill’s passage.
In an unprecedented move, LegCo President Andrew Leung also cast a vote, saying: “As the president of the Legislative Council, I would not vote in usual circumstances. However, legislation of Article 23 is not just any other piece of legislation, it relates to national security in Hong Kong, it is of the utmost importance, so at this historical moment I will vote in favour of the bill.”
Addressing lawmakers after the passage of the bill, Chief Executive John Lee addressed lawmakers.
“”Today is a historical moment in Hong Kong, a historical moment we have waited for 26 years, eight months and 19 days… [the legislation] is finally completed,” Lee said.
The law would be enacted officially on March 23, the leader added.
During a seven-hour second reading of the bill that began at 9 am on Tuesday, all 89 legislators expressed their support for the law, with several saying it was an “honour” to be involved in the “historic milestone.” Most spoke for around five minutes, according to Ming Pao.
After lawmakers had spoken, Secretary for Security Chris Tang thanked them for supporting the bill “without reservation.” The enactment of the domestic security law – separate to the 2020 Beijing-imposed security law – marked an “important milestone” in accurately and fully implementing the One Country, Two Systems policy, Tang said.
The bill had been reviewed in a “highly efficient” manner, Tang said, citing the almost 50 hours spent discussing the proposed law since the bills committee first met on March 8.
“The legislation had very strong broad popular support and the public understood deeply the importance of this move of safeguarding national security,” he said in Cantonese.
Article 23 offences
The law targets five types of offences – treason, insurrection, sabotage, external interference, and theft of state secrets and espionage. Those convicted of the first three face life in prison, while anyone found guilty of sedition could be jailed for up to seven years – or 10 if they had colluded with an “external force” – up from two years previously.
It also gives new powers to the police and courts to extend the pre-charge detention period for those held on suspicion of endangering national security to up to 16 days, and to restrict detainees’ access to lawyers.
Thee new law is mandated in Article 23 of the city’s mini-constitution. Authorities have said it is necessary to plug the “loopholes” left after Beijing imposed its own national security legislation on the city in June 2020, following large-scale protests and unrest in 2019.
Protests erupted in June that year over a proposed amendment to Hong Kong’s extradition bill that would have allowed criminal suspects to be transferred to mainland China for trial. They escalated into sometimes violent displays of dissent against police behaviour, amid calls for democracy and anger over Beijing’s encroachment.
The demonstrations were cited by the government as justification for why further security legislation was necessary, saying in a consultation document that “plain deficiencies in the work on safeguarding national security resulted in the social chaos… ultimately causing the Hong Kong version of ‘colour revolution’ in 2019.”
Public opposition to the legislation in Hong Kong has been muted, with the government hailing a near 97 per cent support rate from submissions received during a one-month consultation period. However, international rights groups and governments overseas have expressed concerns that it may further erode freedoms in the city, which has seen dozens of pro-democracy figures detained and its civil society shrink since Beijing’s law was enacted.
The government has said the new law is comparable to security laws in Western countries, such as the UK, the US and Canada.
However, the Hong Kong Bar Association earlier called for clearer provisions in the legislation, saying uncertainty about how it may be applied could have “a chilling effect on lawful conduct.” The city’s largest press group, the Hong Kong Journalists Association, warned that the definition of state secrets in the proposed law was too broad and may impede legitimate reporting.
In 2003, when the government first tried to push through legislation under Article 23, 500,000 Hongkongers took to the streets in peaceful protest and it failed to secure majority support in the LegCo.
Additional reporting: Kelly Ho
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