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Good cause,bad tactics

Good cause,bad tactics

Hong Kong’s freedom was always conditional and ultimately doomed but last week’s blundering collapse was premature and far from inevitable

One Hong Kong lawmaker, Claudia Mo, said it was “the death-knell of Hong Kong’s democracy fight.” But she was part of it: One of the 15 remaining pro-democracy members of the Legislative Council (Legco) who resigned recently in protest at the expulsion of four other democratically-elected members of the pseudo-Parliament. Wu Chi-wai, speaking for the 15 who resigned, tweeted that, “‘One country, two systems’ in Hong Kong has come to an end.” That is true, and it is regrettable, but it’s hard to see how a mass resignation that eliminates all pro-democracy legislators from Legco helps the cause. Bad tactics in a good cause has been the hallmark of the democratic movement’s behaviour throughout the last 18 months. It mobilised a very effective non-violent protest campaign when the Communist Government in Beijing introduced a law in June 2019 that directly challenged the deal signed by China and the former colonial power, the UK, in 1997.

The UK ignored the democratic rights of the city’s Chinese majority for most of its 155-year tenure, but when it handed the colony back to China in 1997, it did get a guarantee that Hong Kong could keep its free institutions, including freedom of speech and of the Press, impartial courts, and a separate, partly democratic Government for 50 years. “One country, two systems” was the slogan. Beijing’s new law would have allowed Hong Kong residents to be transferred to mainland courts for certain “security” offences. So the protesters spilled out into the streets to protect the status quo, which kept all Hong Kongers free from Communist interference and made some very rich. Within three months, Chief Executive Carrie Lam withdrew the legislation. The Hong Kong Government is not an entirely free agent and Lam initially went along with Beijing’s demand. By withdrawing it, she was signalling that Beijing was willing to drop the matter for now. But the protesters snatched defeat from the jaws of victory.

The sensible thing to do was accept the concession and go home. Beijing’s demand might come back again in five years, but enjoy the time you have won. The Communist regime will never let you have any more than this, and the mainland population outnumbers you 200-to-one. Instead of going home happy, the protesters stayed out in the streets and raised the stakes, demanding fully free elections and more autonomy for Hong Kong. They also broke the prime rule and allowed their protests to become violent. (Don’t explain that the police are being violent; your only safety lies in remaining non-violent regardless of the provocation.)

So Xi Jinping’s Communist regime in Beijing struck back hard against what it saw as a serious challenge to its authority. A new law was imposed on Hong Kong, contrary to the 1997 agreement, that effectively subordinates the city’s legal system to Beijing’s whims. It was the end of Hong Kong’s legal autonomy, and to rub it in, four pro-democracy legislators were expelled from the Legco. In a final Quixotic gesture last week, all the remaining democrats in the Legco quit too. It’s a prelude to a far larger abandonment. Hong Kong’s relative freedom was always conditional and ultimately doomed (2047 at the latest) but last week’s blundering collapse was premature and far from inevitable. Only two substantive questions now remain. What happens to Taiwan, and where will all the Hong Kongers, who want to leave, go? One-third of Hong Kong’s seven million people were born on the mainland: Some of them moved to the city for the money, but most were undoubtedly getting away from the Communists. Another third will be the children or grand-children of those refugees (the city’s population was only 6,00,000 in 1945) and will probably share their opinions. A lot will leave.

An estimated 6,00,000 Hong Kong residents already hold full foreign passports, half Canadians and most of the rest Australian, British or American ones. They acquired them as an insurance policy, and this is the contingency they were insuring against. Another three million people hold British National (Overseas) passports or can easily acquire them, and London promises that they can all move to the UK if they wish. The “central range” estimate of the British Home Office is that between 2,58,000 and 3,22,000 Hong Kongers will come within five years, but it could be many more. That’s unless Beijing stops them from leaving. But if it closes the gates like that, it would be the definitive end of Hong Kong as a great international trading city. And what about Taiwan? Well, “one country, two systems” was also the promise Beijing was holding out to Taiwan to seduce it into peaceful reunification. It has now been comprehensively trashed, and the long-term likelihood of an attempted military “solution” to the Taiwan “problem” has just risen significantly.

(Gwynne Dyer’s new book is ‘Growing Pains: The Future of Democracy and Work’)

Good cause,bad tactics

Good cause,bad tactics

Hong Kong’s freedom was always conditional and ultimately doomed but last week’s blundering collapse was premature and far from inevitable

One Hong Kong lawmaker, Claudia Mo, said it was “the death-knell of Hong Kong’s democracy fight.” But she was part of it: One of the 15 remaining pro-democracy members of the Legislative Council (Legco) who resigned recently in protest at the expulsion of four other democratically-elected members of the pseudo-Parliament. Wu Chi-wai, speaking for the 15 who resigned, tweeted that, “‘One country, two systems’ in Hong Kong has come to an end.” That is true, and it is regrettable, but it’s hard to see how a mass resignation that eliminates all pro-democracy legislators from Legco helps the cause. Bad tactics in a good cause has been the hallmark of the democratic movement’s behaviour throughout the last 18 months. It mobilised a very effective non-violent protest campaign when the Communist Government in Beijing introduced a law in June 2019 that directly challenged the deal signed by China and the former colonial power, the UK, in 1997.

The UK ignored the democratic rights of the city’s Chinese majority for most of its 155-year tenure, but when it handed the colony back to China in 1997, it did get a guarantee that Hong Kong could keep its free institutions, including freedom of speech and of the Press, impartial courts, and a separate, partly democratic Government for 50 years. “One country, two systems” was the slogan. Beijing’s new law would have allowed Hong Kong residents to be transferred to mainland courts for certain “security” offences. So the protesters spilled out into the streets to protect the status quo, which kept all Hong Kongers free from Communist interference and made some very rich. Within three months, Chief Executive Carrie Lam withdrew the legislation. The Hong Kong Government is not an entirely free agent and Lam initially went along with Beijing’s demand. By withdrawing it, she was signalling that Beijing was willing to drop the matter for now. But the protesters snatched defeat from the jaws of victory.

The sensible thing to do was accept the concession and go home. Beijing’s demand might come back again in five years, but enjoy the time you have won. The Communist regime will never let you have any more than this, and the mainland population outnumbers you 200-to-one. Instead of going home happy, the protesters stayed out in the streets and raised the stakes, demanding fully free elections and more autonomy for Hong Kong. They also broke the prime rule and allowed their protests to become violent. (Don’t explain that the police are being violent; your only safety lies in remaining non-violent regardless of the provocation.)

So Xi Jinping’s Communist regime in Beijing struck back hard against what it saw as a serious challenge to its authority. A new law was imposed on Hong Kong, contrary to the 1997 agreement, that effectively subordinates the city’s legal system to Beijing’s whims. It was the end of Hong Kong’s legal autonomy, and to rub it in, four pro-democracy legislators were expelled from the Legco. In a final Quixotic gesture last week, all the remaining democrats in the Legco quit too. It’s a prelude to a far larger abandonment. Hong Kong’s relative freedom was always conditional and ultimately doomed (2047 at the latest) but last week’s blundering collapse was premature and far from inevitable. Only two substantive questions now remain. What happens to Taiwan, and where will all the Hong Kongers, who want to leave, go? One-third of Hong Kong’s seven million people were born on the mainland: Some of them moved to the city for the money, but most were undoubtedly getting away from the Communists. Another third will be the children or grand-children of those refugees (the city’s population was only 6,00,000 in 1945) and will probably share their opinions. A lot will leave.

An estimated 6,00,000 Hong Kong residents already hold full foreign passports, half Canadians and most of the rest Australian, British or American ones. They acquired them as an insurance policy, and this is the contingency they were insuring against. Another three million people hold British National (Overseas) passports or can easily acquire them, and London promises that they can all move to the UK if they wish. The “central range” estimate of the British Home Office is that between 2,58,000 and 3,22,000 Hong Kongers will come within five years, but it could be many more. That’s unless Beijing stops them from leaving. But if it closes the gates like that, it would be the definitive end of Hong Kong as a great international trading city. And what about Taiwan? Well, “one country, two systems” was also the promise Beijing was holding out to Taiwan to seduce it into peaceful reunification. It has now been comprehensively trashed, and the long-term likelihood of an attempted military “solution” to the Taiwan “problem” has just risen significantly.

(Gwynne Dyer’s new book is ‘Growing Pains: The Future of Democracy and Work’)

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