Hong Kong rejects ‘unfounded’ US, UK claims of deteriorating freedoms
(last modified Sat, 02 Apr 2022 14:14:47 GMT )
Apr 02, 2022 14:14 UTC
  • Hong Kong rejects ‘unfounded’ US, UK claims of deteriorating freedoms

Hong Kong has slammed as “unfounded” and “ridiculous” allegations in the reports recently issued by the US and the UK about what they call deteriorating democratic rights and freedoms in the semi-autonomous Chinese city.

In a statement on Thursday, the regional administration in Hong Kong rejected the allegations leveled against it in the reports and urged foreign countries “to stop interfering into the internal affairs of China through Hong Kong affairs.”

“We strongly oppose the unfounded and ridiculous allegations against the HKSAR (Hong Kong Special Administrative Region) Government made by foreign countries through various reports,” the statement said.

In an updated assessment of the situation in the Chinese region released on Thursday, the UK government claimed that “alternative voices in Hong Kong’s executive, legislature, civil society and media had been all but extinguished.”

Making similar allegations in its report, which covered the 12 months from March 2021, the US government accused Chinese authorities of taking actions “that eliminated the ability of Hong Kong’s pro-democracy opposition to play a meaningful role in the city’s governance and effectively criminalized peaceful political expression critical of the central and local governments.”

Both reports accused the region’s local government of jailing or disqualifying “pro-democracy” politicians from elections.

“As the 25th anniversary of Hong Kong’s handover to Beijing approaches, Hong Kong’s freedoms are diminishing while the PRC (People’s Republic of China) tightens its rule,” US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said in a statement on Thursday accompanying the latest Hong Kong Policy Act Report.

The latest reports from the UK and the US come after two British Supreme Court judges resigned from the region’s highest court, citing the effects of the National Security Law by China. Hong Kong’s Chief Executive Carrie Lam dismissed their exit as “politically motivated.”

ME