July 24, 1989
excerpts from the "Los Angeles Times"
excerpts from the "Los Angeles Times"
This morning (July 25, 2019), I looked at the "Drudge Report" and realized there was an article in the "Los Angeles Times" yesterday regarding the PRC and Hong Kong. so I thought I would post it here:
STAFF
WRITER
JULY 24, 2019
10:46 AM
BEIJING —
The latest protests
in Hong Kong appear to have touched a nerve in Beijing, where officials and
state media have escalated rhetoric against the pro-democracy movement,
accusing the United States of interference and ominously affirming the People’s
Liberation Army’s ability to intervene at the Hong Kong government’s request.
Chinese Defense Ministry spokesman Wu
Qian said at a news conference Wednesday morning that the protests on Sunday
were “intolerable.”
“Some radical protesters’ actions
challenge the authority of the central government and the bottom line of ‘One
Country, Two Systems,’” Wu said, adding that the ministry would follow Article
14 of Hong Kong’s Basic Law.
“One Country, Two Systems” is China’s
way of referring to its administration of Hong Kong, under which it is part of
China but allowed to maintain some degree of autonomy. Article 14 states that
the Chinese government’s military forces stationed in Hong Kong will not
interfere in local affairs unless the Hong Kong government requests assistance
“in the maintenance of public order” or for disaster relief.
As mass protests against a proposed
extradition bill morphed
into a desperate pro-democracy movement in Hong Kong over the last two
months, the local government has denied rumors that the Chinese military might
intervene. Some analysts who study Hong Kong expressed skepticism that Beijing
would send its military, which could have devastating consequences.
But Chinese officials and media are now
stoking nationalist anger with rhetoric that’s been used to pave the way for
crackdowns in the past, specifically with accusations of foreign intervention
and condemnations of “chaos” and “disorder.”
Sunday’s protests broadened the scope
of conflict as protesters shifted from targeting the Hong Kong territorial
government and police to directly challenging the Chinese government.
Thousands marched to
Beijing’s representative office in Hong Kong, chanting a
pro-independence slogan. They splattered the Chinese government emblem with
eggs and black ink and spray-painted the walls with derogatory terms for China.
Later that night, organized pro-Beijing thugs
rampaged through a mass transit station in the northern rural area of Yuen
Long, beating civilians with metal rods and wooden sticks.
Public fury has swelled against Hong
Kong’s police force, which didn’t arrive until an hour after the attacks began
and then disappeared before the mob returned to continue attacking people.
Lynette Ong, a University of Toronto
political scientist who’s researched the employment of “thugs for hire” in
mainland China, said this is a common practice and was used against protesters
during the 2014
Occupy Central movement in Hong Kong.
“Governments outsource violence to
third-party agents for ‘plausible deniability,’” Ong said, adding that the
thugs in this case could also have been hired by business interests who want
protests to end.
During a pro-Beijing rally on Saturday,
Hong Kong newspaper executive Arthur Shek gave a speech encouraging crowds to
“discipline” pro-democracy protesters with canes and PVC pipes. “Caning the
kids is teaching them, not violence,” he said.
Shek has since resigned, after staff of
his paper signed a petition condemning his remarks.
Video has emerged of pro-establishment
legislator Junius Ho shaking hands with some of the men in white, as well as of
police officers speaking with them, despite official claims that the police had
made no arrests that night because they “could not be sure of who was
involved.”
Police have since arrested 11 men in
connection with the attacks on charges of unlawful assembly. They’ve also
arrested more than 120 people in connection with pro-democracy protests since
early June.
Protesters trashed Ho’s legislative
office Monday and damaged Ho’s parents’ gravestones, spray-painting
“official-triad collusion” on a wall above them.
In response, Ho posted a Facebook video
making death threats against pro-democratic legislator Eddie Chu, who has
spoken up against corruption in rural areas in the past and argued with Ho on a
local TV channel on Tuesday.
Ho said Chu had “two paths” before him:
“One is a path of being alive, one is a path of not being alive. You must
choose which path to take. Decide soon,” he said.
There is no evidence of any connection
between Chu and the graveyard vandalism.
While Hong Kongers raise an outcry
against the Yuen Long attack, Chinese media have fixated on protesters’
defacement of the Chinese government office.
Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua
Chunying said at a news conference Tuesday that the vandalism was a “radical,
illegal, violent action” and a “serious challenge to the bottom line of ‘One
Country, Two Systems,’” adding that foreign powers were obviously directing
these actions behind the scenes.
“Hong Kong is China’s Hong Kong. China
will absolutely not allow any foreign power to intervene in Hong Kong affairs,”
Hua said. “We urge America to withdraw their black hands from Hong Kong before
it is too late.”
There has been no evidence of U.S.
involvement in the Hong Kong protests, although the U.S.-China trade war has
frayed relations between Beijing and Washington.
State media and Chinese social media,
which is censored so that only state-approved content appears, shared
portrayals of the Hong Kong protesters as violent mobs attacking police and
threatening Chinese sovereignty while a “silent majority” of pro-Beijing Hong
Kongers cried for help to protect Hong Kong from violence.
State media have said nothing about the
Yuen Long mob so far, but social media posts supporting the attackers have been
allowed to proliferate.
“If someone wanted to invade your
homeland, wouldn’t you resist them rather than welcoming them?” wrote one
commenter in defense of the white-shirted attackers. “These rioters came to
Yuen Long to create riots first, then the locals in white shirts resisted
them.”
It’s a turnaround from earlier media
strategy in mainland China, where the peaceful million-person marches in Hong
Kong in June were censored.
Only when protesters broke into
the legislative building on July 1 did Chinese media begin reporting on the
Hong Kong protesters, framed as troublemaking rioters under foreign influence.
“It is like what they tried to do when
broadcasting images of upheavals in Western countries to portray an impression
of chaotic democracy,” said Ho-fung Hung, sociology professor at Johns Hopkins
University. “But such efforts could easily backfire.”
“The mobilization of thugs could
further delegitimize the government and make the protest boil over further. The
showing of protest footage could also encourage mainland citizens to imitate,”
Ho said.
Jeff Wasserstrom, a historian at UC
Irvine, said the state narrative’s portrayal of Hong Kong protesters resembles
how Chinese Communist Party leadership spoke about student protesters in
Tiananmen Square in the lead-up to the massacre
in 1989.
“The CCP leadership promulgated the
notion 30 years ago that what were, in fact, overwhelmingly nonviolent and
broadly supported gatherings in Tiananmen and public squares in scores of other
cities were somehow creating ‘chaos,’” Wasserstrom said.
The echoes come alongside state praise
for Li
Peng,
the recently deceased hard-line former premier who backed a
military response to
the Tiananmen protests.
An official obituary said Li “made
decisive moves to stop the turmoil” in 1989, playing “an important role in the
major struggle concerning the future and fate of the Party and the state.”
At the same time, Chinese leader Xi
Jinping seems so far determined to avoid a repeat of Tiananmen.
Willy Lam, professor in Chinese
politics at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, said that Xi is hesitant to
deploy troops because it would mean an end to the “One Country, Two Systems”
setup, which is supposed to guarantee Hong Kong semi-autonomy until 2047.
Chinese troops in Hong Kong’s streets
might also drive out the thousands of multinational businesses headquartered in
Hong Kong, he said, which would be a major loss for Beijing.
Beijing seems to be using the same
strategy as in 2014, Lam said: “Do nothing, make no concessions and wait for
the protesters to make mistakes.”
But the current movement has far
broader social support than the Occupy movement did in 2014, which means the
protests may escalate rather than fade away.
The march planned for Saturday in Yuen
Long may be “explosive,” Lam said.
One idea that’s gaining traction is for
the government to establish an independent judiciary-led inquiry into both
police and protester violence over the last two months.
Dozens of ex-Hong Kong officials and
legislators, the Hong Kong Bar Assn., the Hong Kong General Chamber of Commerce
and more than 60 family members of police officers have voiced support for such
a commission.
Setting up such an inquiry would be
“painful” for Beijing, Lam said, but might be the “least costly maneuver” given
the alternatives of “losing face” by withdrawing the bill, especially now that
domestic anger is ramped up, or escalating into military intervention.
Global attention plays a crucial role
in what happens next in Hong Kong, Wasserstrom said.
“This is a pivotal moment in one of the
great David and Goliath struggles of contemporary times. It has been
extraordinary how often the David in this case has been able to stand up to the
Goliath,” Wasserstrom said.
“That does not mean it can necessarily
keep happening and that the Goliath in Beijing will not change its strategy.”
Nicole Liu and Gaochao
Zhang in the Times’ Beijing bureau contributed to this report.
Alice Su is a foreign correspondent for the Los Angeles Times
based in Beijing, China.
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