Foreign Secretary declares breach of Sino-British Joint Declaration
Thursday, 12 November 2020 10:33
Following the disqualification of four pro-democracy lawmakers in
Hong Kong, the UK Government has declared China in breach of the
Sino-British Joint Declaration. Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab
said: Beijing’s imposition of new rules to disqualify elected
legislators in Hong Kong constitutes a clear breach of the legally
binding Sino-British Joint Declaration. China has once again broken
its promises and undermined Hong Kong’s high degree of
autonomy....Request free trial
Following the disqualification of four pro-democracy
lawmakers in Hong Kong, the UK Government has declared China in
breach of the Sino-British Joint Declaration.
Foreign Secretary said:
Beijing’s imposition of new rules to disqualify elected
legislators in Hong Kong constitutes a clear breach of the
legally binding Sino-British Joint Declaration.
China has once again broken its promises and undermined Hong
Kong’s high degree of autonomy. The UK will stand up for the
people of Hong Kong, and call out violations of their rights
and freedoms. With our international partners, we will hold
China to the obligations it freely assumed under international
law.
Background
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On 11 November 2020, China’s National People’s Congress
Standing Committee decided that any Hong Kong legislator who
promote or support Hong Kong independence, refuse to
recognise China’s sovereignty over Hong Kong, seek foreign
countries to interfere in the affairs of Hong Kong, or
endanger the national security of Hong Kong, will be in
breach of the Parliamentary oath and should be disqualified
from membership of the Hong Kong Legislative Council. This
Decision led to the immediate removal of four elected members
of the Legislative Council who were - at that moment -
sitting in the Chamber. .
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The Decision is part of a pattern apparently designed to
harass and stifle all voices critical of China’s policies.
The new rules for disqualification provide a further tool in
this campaign, with vague criteria open to wide-ranging
interpretation.
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We judge that this Decision breaches the legally-binding
Sino-British Joint Declaration. It breaches both China’s
commitment that Hong Kong will enjoy a ‘high degree of
autonomy’ and the right to freedom of speech guaranteed under
Paragraph 3 and Annex I of the Declaration.
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This is the third time since 1997 that China has breached the
legally-binding Joint Declaration. The first was in 2016. The
second was in June 2020 when Beijing introduced the Hong Kong
National Security Legislation.
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