US Lawmakers OK Bill to Sanction Chinese Banks Over Hong Kong National Security Law BY ISABEL VAN BRUGEN July 2, 2020 Updated: July 2, 2020 Print
The U.S. House of Representatives on July 1 unanimously passed a bill imposing sanctions on banks doing business with Chinese officials involved in the implementation of the Chinese communist regimes national security law in Hong Kong.
Passage of the legislation came in response to Beijings draconian new law, which came into effect in Hong Kong this week. The standing committee of Chinas rubber-stamp legislature, the National Peoples Congress (NPC), passed the law on June 30 via ceremonial votes.
The law criminalizes individuals for any acts of subversion, secession, terrorism, and collusion with foreign forces, with maximum penalties of life imprisonment. Critics fear the law will be used to crack down on those critical of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP).
Before the legislation to penalize banks doing business with Chinese officials was passed, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) described the law as a brutal, sweeping crackdown on Hong Kong.
The law is a brutal, sweeping crackdown against the people of Hong Kong, intended to destroy the freedoms they were promised, Pelosi said at a House Foreign Affairs Committee hearing on the situation in Hong Kong.
Concerns have been raised that the legislature breaches Hong Kongs Basic Law, which guarantees that the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights can remain in force in the territory.
Under the Sino-British Joint Declaration, which set the terms of Hong Kongs transfer to Chinese rule in 1997, the regime agreed to grant the city autonomy and freedoms not enjoyed in the mainland, under the formula of one country, two systems.
On the first day that the national security law was enforced, the Hong Kong Police Force said it had detained 10 peoplesix men and four womenon suspicion of violating the security law. In total, about 370 were arrested for a number of offenses, some for unlawful assembly
obstructing police, and possession of weapons, officials said.
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Poster Comment:
Tit for tat.