In first visit by a British foreign secretary for five years, Philip Hammond says Hong Kong’s success due to independent judiciary and respect for rights
View of Victoria Harbour and Central from Victoria Peak, Hong Kong. Britain has warned the former colony faces threats to its autonomy. Photograph: Image Source/Getty Images/Image Source
Agence France-Presse
Friday 8 April 2016 07.00 BST
Philip Hammond, the British foreign secretary, warned over threats to Hong Kong’s autonomy on Friday as he visited the city where fears are growing that Beijing’s grip is tightening.
It was the first visit by a British foreign secretary for five years and comes in the wake of the high-profile case of a group of booksellers who went missing from Hong Kong and surfaced in China. One of them was a British citizen.
The city has been semi-autonomous since it was handed back to China by Britain in 1997 under an agreement that protects its freedoms for 50 years. However, there are concerns those freedoms are disappearing.
“Although the ‘One Country, Two Systems’ model is generally working well in Hong Kong, concerns have been raised over the recent booksellers’ case,” Hammond said in a statement on Friday.
“Rule of law is the cornerstone of an open and fair society. Hong Kong’s success is underpinned by its independent judiciary and respect for rights and freedoms,” he added.
In a meeting with Hong Kong’s leader Leung Chun-ying, the British Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) said that Hammond would restate “support for Hong Kong’s high degree of autonomy, rights and freedoms”, as well as commitment to the Sino-British joint declaration which protects Hong Kong’s liberties.
The five booksellers worked for a Hong Kong publishing house famous for salacious titles about high-ranking Chinese politicians. They went missing at the end of last year.
Four are under criminal investigation in the mainland – the fifth, UK citizen Lee Bo, says he is “assisting” with the investigations and has come back to visit Hong Kong recently, insisting he is a free man.
Britain has voiced anger over Lee – the only bookseller who disappeared from Hong Kong – saying it believed he was “involuntarily removed to the mainland” in what it called a “serious breach” of the handover agreement.
China criticised the UK for interfering in its affairs.
The other four men disappeared from Thailand and mainland China.
The FCO added that Hammond would also “underline the importance of One Country, Two Systems and of restarting progress on political reform” in his meeting with Leung later Friday.
The political reform process has stalled since mass pro-democracy protests in 2014 failed to win concessions from the Hong Kong authorities and Beijing.
The rallies were calling for fully free leadership elections, after the government introduced a reform package that activists derided as fake democracy because it allowed Beijing to vet candidates.
The package was eventually voted down in the legislature and the reform debate is now on ice.
Hammond’s visit is the first stop on an east Asia tour, ahead of the G7 foreign ministers’ meeting in Japan starting on April 10.
He will also meet members of Scotland’s Rugby Sevens team as the Hong Kong Sevens tournament kicks off on Friday, as well as Hong Kong and British businesses “to discuss new ways of connecting the UK, Hong Kong and China markets”, the FCO said.
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