From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hong Kong Basic Law Article 23 is the basis of
a security law proposed by the Government of Hong Kong. It
states:
|
“ |
The Hong Kong Special Administrative Region shall enact laws
on its own to prohibit any act of treason, secession, sedition,
subversion against the Central
People's Government, or theft of state secrets, to prohibit
foreign political organizations or bodies from conducting political
activities in the Region, and to prohibit political organizations
or bodies of the Region from establishing ties with foreign
political organizations or bodies.[1]
|
” |
On 24 September 2002 the government released its proposals for
the anti-subversion law. It is the cause of considerable
controversy and division in Hong Kong, which operates as a separate legal
system in accordance with the Sino-British Joint
Declaration. Protests against the bill resulted in a massive
demonstrations on 1 July 2003. In the aftermath, two cabinet
members resigned and the bill was withdrawn after it became clear
that it would not get the necessary support from Legco for it to be
passed. The law was then shelved indefinitely.
Background
Under British rule, Hong Kong had a number of controversial laws
regarding national security, which among other things allowed the
Hong Kong government to ban organizations, which it did in regard
to both the Communist Party of China and
the Kuomintang.
Although these laws had rarely been enforced since the 1960s, there
was concern about the possible use of those laws after the handover
to the People's Republic of China
(PRC).
Article 23 of the Hong Kong Basic Law stipulates that
the Hong Kong Special
Administrative Region shall enact laws on its own to protect
national security. At the time of the drafting of the Basic Law
this was intended to be protective of civil rights in that it
placed responsibility for drafting these laws with the Hong Kong
government.[1]
The Hong Kong Government has drafted the National Security
(Legislative Provisions) Bill to implement Article 23 and replace
British colonial era laws on the subject.
The controversy over Article 23 began in mid-2002 when Qian Qichen, Vice
Premier of the State
Council, expressed Beijing's desire for Hong Kong to pass the
required legislation quickly. This prompted the Chief Executive of Hong
Kong Tung Chee
Hwa to begin the process of drafting the said legislation. Many
in Hong Kong believe that Tung's responsiveness to this request, in
contrast to what is commonly perceived to be his lack of desire,
was due in part to the fact that Tung himself owes a personal debt
to the PRC government: his family's shipping conglomerate Orient
Overseas was bailed out for the sum of US
$110 million by Chinese government-owned companies in the
1980s.[2]
Positions
Concern with the legislation has arisen because of the authoritarian regime in the People's
Republic of China: the new law invokes concepts of treason against the PRC in
certain circumstances. Critics claim that this will erode freedom of
speech rights. Suspicions have been exacerbated by the refusal
of the government to issue a White Bill on the legislation, causing
groups such as Amnesty International to declare
that it "has grave concerns about the proposals in the government's
consultation document and the lack of a draft White Bill which
means that the public still do not know how the legislation will
actually be worded". The government will be required to issue a
blue paper containing the draft legislation when it presents the
new bill to the Hong Kong
Legislative Council ("Legco"), but this would leave no time for
the public to voice its concerns, and the government may use its
unelected majority in Legco to rush the bill through.
Concerns
In the consultation document of Article 23 enactment, the
following issues have caused concern:
- Any branch of an organization that is part of an organization
banned by the central government of the PRC under state security
reasons can be banned in Hong Kong at any time, and the Hong Kong
government does not have to conduct any independent investigation.
This provision was of particular concern because Mainland China
does not have a general legal mechanism for defining a banned
organization or political dissidents. One
consequence of this is that it becomes somewhat harder to prosecute
regular members of an organization disliked by the PRC, as it
requires the central government to try to find a crime which the
individual has committed.
- The concepts of government and country are confused and
exchangeable in the proposed document. In a democratic country,
citizens are empowered with the right to monitor and check the government. The proposed
enactment of Article 23 makes opposing the government the same as
opposing the country.
- In the proposed enactment, police are allowed to enter
residential buildings and arrest people at any time without court warrants or evidence.
- Any speech deemed as instigative can be regarded as illegal,
including oral, written and electronic forms; it is a crime both to
express, and to hear such speech and fail to report it.
- Permanent residents of Hong Kong are under the power of this
law, no matter where they reside. People who are in Hong Kong are
also under the power of Article 23, regardless of nationality,
including people who visit or transit through Hong Kong. Violations
of Article 23 can result in a life term in prison.
Debate
Supporters of the legislation, the most vocal of which is
perhaps Hong Kong's Secretary for Security Regina Ip, who viewed the
introduction of the law as being quite ordinary and natural:
- "Firstly, all countries have laws to protect national security
but, in Hong Kong, the Mainland's national laws on this subject do
not apply. It has been left up to the Hong Kong SAR Government to
enact laws 'on its own'. This in itself shows a great measure of
trust in Hong Kong people by the Central Government authorities. We
are not introducing Mainland law into Hong Kong. We are developing
our own approach. Can you imagine California or Connecticut
enacting their own laws against treasonous acts or foreign
organizations bent on the overthrow of the US Government?"[3]
- "Secondly, we have a constitutional and legal obligation, under
our Basic Law, to enact such laws. By doing so, we fulfil our role
to implement One Country,
Two Systems. Five years after Reunification, it is time to move
ahead on a matter that is regarded as extremely important by our
sovereign. By doing so, we will remove once and for all the
uncertainties that have cropped up from time to time over the past
five years as to when, and in what form, Article 23 will be
implemented."[3]
- "We also have a moral duty, as a Special Administrative Region
of the PRC, to protect the security and sovereignty of our country.
Why should Hong Kong people be under any less obligation to do so,
or indeed feel uncomfortable in doing so, compared to citizens in
other countries?"[3]
Mrs. Ip has been criticised by the press and religious groups
for her zealousness in pursuing the implementation of the
legislation. In a politically clumsy move, Mrs. Ip asserted that
because the ordinary people would not "understand the legal
language", there was no point in consulting them on it.
Mr. Bob Allcock, Hong Kong's Solicitor-General, has been
perceived as more even-handed in his approach and has frequently
argued that the laws proposed by the government are less
restrictive than the colonial era laws that they are intended to
replace:
- "Contrary to what some have alleged, the Bill to implement
Article 23 of the Basic Law does not provide for 'secret trials'. Any
criminal prosecution under the proposed new laws would be subject
to normal trial procedures. In addition, if anyone were charged
with one of the serious offences against national security, he or
she would have the right to trial by jury."[4]
- "The proposed new offence of treason will be narrower than the
existing offence. It will therefore impose no new restrictions on
freedom of speech. The only situations in which words could amount
to treason under the proposals would be where the words instigate a
foreigner to invade the PRC or assist a public enemy at war with
the PRC. For example, if the PRC is at war with a foreign country,
and a Hong Kong permanent resident broadcasts propaganda for the
enemy, he may be convicted for assisting that enemy."[5]
He has also pointed out that under the new laws, a banned
organization can appeal the ban to the judiciary, a right not
available under the previous laws.
In response, opponents of the bill including Martin Lee have argued
that a potentially repressive bill is more acceptable in a system
of parliamentary democracy and that
under British rule, the potential impact of security laws was
minimized by the fact that political leaders would suffer political
damage if they attempted to enforce these laws. The argument is
that in the case where Hong Kong becomes authoritarian, there are
fewer restrictions which prevent them drafting bad laws.
In response to the argument that Article 23 legislation is
constitutionally required, opponents to the government bill point
out that the Basic Law does not setup a specific time for passage
of the legislation, and that the Basic Law also constitutionally
requires that the HK government work toward a system of universal
suffrage. Opponents argue that because both goals do not have
time limits, there is no reason to implement Article 23 legislation
before universal suffrage.
Another argument against Article 23 laws as drafted by the HK
government has been given by John Kamm, who argues that the mechanism for
banning organizations would have the effect of requiring that
Mainland China be more repressive outside of Hong Kong. His
argument is that since 1997, Mainland China has not had the legal
concept of banning an organization on national security grounds,
and that political repression in the PRC
takes the form of government criminal charges against individual
acts. He argues that the HK government's draft of Article 23 law
requires the PRC to set up a system of banning organizations on
national security grounds and this would greatly hurt members of
politically sensitive organizations who are not leaders. He points
out that the PRC currently typically imprisons only the leadership
of an organization, and merely harasses lower-level members because
their behavior does not rise to the level of criminal charges. By
passing Article 23 law, Hong Kong will require the PRC to develop
the legal mechanisms to punish all members of a banned political
organization, a power it now only has with respect to religious
organizations such as Falun gong and students who were involved
in the Tiananmen Square protests
of 1989. For example, Macau which has implemented the Article
23, identical to the article proposed for Hong Kong, in June 2009
refused transit to mainland China by a Tiananmen student leader Wu'er
Kaixi.[6]
Finally, at a time when Hong Kong's economy, inextricably linked to its property
index, is in the doldrums, and SARS has had a major impact on life in the
Special Administrative Region, the government's focus on Article 23
has been perceived as inappropriate, especially since Hong Kong has
been a stable place since the 1997 handover from the United Kingdom to
the PRC and revision of colonial anti-subversion laws is not
required.
Journalists in
particular are concerned about the new law, especially with respect
to journalistic criticism of the Central Government of the People's
Republic of China and its complex relationship with Taiwan and Tibet, or other matters arising from the
possession of official documents.
Outspoken Catholic Bishop Joseph Cardinal Zen has been a key figure
in the debate over the legislation: on 15 May 2003 he instructed
his church members to resist the introduction of the legislation.
But his speech was criticized by some pro-PRC political
commentators in Hong Kong, saying that the Church should not be
involved in political matters.
The normally neutral Hong Kong Bar Association, an
organisation representing barristers, has also stepped into the fray:
Bar Association chairman Alan Leong has publicly said: "The more you
read into this document, the more anxious and concerned you get.
There are some glaring ambiguities".
Other organisations which have spoken out against the proposal
include the Hong Kong Journalists
Association, Hong Kong
Confederation of Trade Unions, the International
Confederation of Free Trade Unions, the Foreign Correspondents'
Club and the Faculty of Law at the
University of Hong Kong. Members of the European
Parliament, and officials of the United States Department
of State, the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand have expressed concerns about
the Article 23 legislation.
Some banks in Hong Kong were reported to be considering
relocation if the proposed Article 23 is passed out of the fear
that the laws would restrict the free flow of information. On 7
December 2002, it was reported in the press that ten foreign banks
had told the government privately that the introduction of Article
23 would have disastrous consequences for Hong Kong, threatening
its demise as Asia's financial capital.[7]
Timeline
A poster promoting the March for Democracy in Hong Kong in 2004,
taken by Rachel Welles
http://ruleofred.com/
- (15 December 2002) - approximately 65,000
people demonstrated against the legislation.
- (24 December, 2002) - 190,000 people had
signed petitions against the proposed enactment of Article 23.
- (1 July 2003) - approximately 350,000 -
700,000 people (out of the total population of 6,730,800)
demonstrated against Article 23 against the failing economy, the
handling of the SARS epidemic and
Tung Chee Hwa and Regina
Ip. To some degree the march was also against Anthony Leung for a car tax scandal earlier
that year. The march started from Victoria Park, Causeway Bay to
Central Government Offices in Central. The generally accepted figure of
marchers is 500,000.[8] The
only protest in Hong Kong larger than this is the one supporting
the 1989
Tiananmen square protest.[9]
- The Democratic Alliance for the Betterment of Hong
Kong (DAB), the larger pro-Beijing party, had on that day
booked a few of the park's football pitches for a carnival with a
comparably meager number of participants. The rest of the park and
the surrounding area was packed with people, literally shoulder to
shoulder. Traffic along the north of Hong Kong Island (around the CBD area)
was effectively paralyzed. The MTR was forced to stop operating
between Central and Tin Hau station in
fear of people not clearing from the stations. Many demonstrators
were still waiting at Victoria Park to start as the first group of
people arrived at the government headquarters. The entire march
started at 3pm. Some religious groups arrived earlier for a
pre-march prayer session. At about 9 to 10pm, the event made news
headlines, except in pro-Beijing newspapers.
- In response to the demonstration, two of the pro-government
parties in the Legislative Council expressed reservations about the
bill, and informal polls of the Legislative Council delegates
suggested that the ability of the government to pass the bill was
in doubt.
- (5 July, 2003) - Tung Chee Hwa announced a
modified security law, which would remove the ability of the police
to conduct warrantless searches, reduce the ability of the
government to ban organizations, and include a "public interest"
defense for publishing state secrets. However, the public doubt
that such "public interest" defense may not fully protect
journalists because whether it is actually a kind of "public
interest" is not defined by the public. The Opposition asked the
public to surround the Legislative Council building on 9 July.
- (6 July, 2003) - Tung announced that the second reading of the Law was to be
postponed after James
Tien of the Liberal Party announced that
he was resigning from the Executive Council and would have his
party members vote for a postponement. As a result, the government
would have insufficient votes to pass the law.
- (7 July, 2003) - Donald Tsang announced that there was no
specific timetable for introducing the bill. In addition the DAB
announced that it was reconsidering its participation in the
government.
- (9 July, 2003) - While the bill was postponed
indefinitely, 50,000 people surrounded the Legislative Council at
night of 9 July. In response, Philip Wong Yu-hong, a pro-government
legislator gave the public the middle finger gesture.[10
]
- (16 July, 2003) - Regina Ip resigned her
position as Secretary for Security citing
"personal reasons", although political commentators attributed the
resignation to the protests over the Article 23 legislation. Her
resignation occurred the same day as that of the Financial
Secretary Antony
Leung.
- Throughout the week Beijing remained mostly quiet. News of the
demonstration on 1 July was noticeably absent from the
Chinese-language versions of China's state media outlets such as
the People's
Daily and Xinhua Press
Agency, however there has been reporting on the demonstration's
political aftermath. Although it hinted on 5 July 2003 that it
would like to see the bill passed quickly, it has not made any
formal statements to that effect.
- (19 July, 2003) - President
Hu Jintao was quoted by
Chinese media as stating that: "The Central Government is very
concerned with the situation in Hong Kong... Only by maintaining
Hong Kong's social stability, can a good commercial environment be
safeguarded and can Hong Kong's advantages as an international
finance, trade and transport center be maintained."
- (20 July, 2003) - President Hu had received
Tung in Beijing with a ceremony. Normally the ceremonial practice
is reserved for visiting heads of state. This is perceived as a face-saving gesture for Tung. Hu emphasized
that Hong Kong needed to pass Article 23 legislation.
- Some political analysts, particularly in Taiwanese newspapers,
have speculated that the moderate approach that the Central
Government has presented toward Hong Kong bears the imprint of more
reformist thinking in the new fourth generation of
leadership led by Hu Jintao and Wen Jiabao. It has also been suggested that
a major influence on Beijing's reaction to the demonstrations is
the strong desire to put on a good face before the Presidential
election in Taiwan in March 2004 and generally make Taiwanese
public opinion more amenable to the cause of Chinese
reunification.
- (5 September, 2003) - the Chief Executive of
Hong Kong announced that Article 23 legislation would be withdrawn,
that it would be reintroduced only after popular consultations, and
that there was no timetable for its reintroduction.
Aftermath
The public outrage against the bill gradually became an urge for
the government to introduce universal suffrage. As a result,
several demonstrations were organized to follow up on the request.
On 1 January 2004 approximately 100,000 people followed the same
route of the 1 July 2003 protest to ask for popular elections of
the Chief Executive in 2007 and the LegCo in 2008. The 2004 1 July protest marks the
first anniversary of demonstration. A march has since followed
every year. On 12 March 2005, Tung Chee Hwa resigned as the Chief Executive of Hong
Kong citing health reasons.[11]
References
- ^ a
b
Basiclaw23. "Basiclaw23." Article
23. Retrieved on 2008-01-03.
- ^
Horlemann, Ralf. [2002] (2002). Hong Kong's Transition to Chinese
Rule. Routledge publishing. ISBN 0415296811.
- ^ a
b
c
Basiclaw23HK. "Basiclaw23." HK needs
laws to protect national security by Secretary for Security, Mrs
Regina Ip, January 2003. Retrieved on 2007-05-05.
- ^ Basiclaw23HK. "Basiclaw23." There
will be no 'secret trials' by Bob Allcock, Solicitor General, 25
March 2003. Retrieved on 2007-05-05.
- ^ Basiclaw23HK. "Basiclaw23." Freedom
of expression is NOT under threat by Bob Allcock, Solicitor General
28 January 2003. Retrieved on 2007-05-05.
- ^
"Tiananmen student leader
vows to try again to return to China".
http://www.chinapost.com.tw/taiwan/china-taiwan-relations/2009/06/04/210899/Tiananmen-student.htm.
- ^
Telegraph.co.uk. "Telegraph.co.uk."
Foreign banks say new laws will spark Hong Kong exodus.
Retrieved on 2008-01-03.
- ^
Wong, Yiu-Chung. One Country, Two Systems in Crisis: Hong Kong's
Transformation Since the Handover. Lexington books. ISBN
0739104926.
- ^ Williams, Louise.
Rich, Roland. [2000] (2000). Losing Control: Freedom of the Press
in Asia. Asia Pacific Press. ISBN 0731536266.
- ^ The
standard.com.hk. "The standard.com.hk."
Legislator escapes probes. Retrieved on 2007-12-24.
- ^
Yau, Cannix (11 March 2005). "Tung's gone. What
next?". Hong Kong Standard. http://www.thestandard.com.hk/news_detail.asp?pp_cat=&art_id=4513&sid=&con_type=1&d_str=20050311&sear_year=2005. Retrieved
2007-01-11.
See also
External
links