Hong Kong's legislature takes up China national anthem bill

Hong Kong's legislature takes up China national anthem bill

HONG KONG: Hong Kong's legislature took up a controversial bill Wednesday that would punish anyone who publicly and intentionally insults the Chinese national anthem with up to three years in prison, raising concerns about Beijing's growing influence in the semi-autonomous Chinese territory.

The move came after soccer fans repeatedly booed the anthem at the start of international qualifiers, upsetting leaders of the ruling Communist Party in Beijing.

Ever since Beijing suppressed the pro-democracy movement in the semi-autonomous city in late 2014, heckling China's national anthem has emerged as a form of protest. The bill will be up for passage this summer.

A former British colony, Hong Kong was handed over to Chinese rule in 1997 but continues to enjoy civil liberties such as freedom of the press that are denied in China. The “one country, two systems'' framework was supposed to last for 50 years but has been significantly eroded under authoritarian Chinese leader Xi Jinping, critics say.

“We're worried that by passing the bill, people's right and liberty to express themselves in terms of political ideology will be restricted,'' said Alvin Yeung, a lawmaker in Hong Kong's Legislative Council, known as LegCo.

Pro-Beijing legislator Holden Chow disagreed, saying the bill was merely about upholding the sanctity of national symbols.

“We are simply deterring people from showing disrespect to the national anthem,'' Chow said.

In 2017, Beijing enacted a national anthem law and entered it as an amendment to Hong Kong's constitution. The anthem, “March of the Volunteers,'' begins with a call for defiance: “Rise up, you people who refuse to be subjugated.''

The bill is virtually assured of passage since the legislators who tend to side with Beijing outnumber the pro-democracy camp. But the law steps into untested waters since it represents Beijing's first effort at requiring Hong Kong to pass a mainland Chinese law, a potential breach of “one country, two systems.''

It shows that more and more laws passed by the National People's Congress, China's rubber-stamp parliament, will “sooner or later be fully applicable to Hong Kong,'' said Willy Lam, a political analyst and adjunct professor at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. “This is a distributing trend.''

Newspaper columnists have pointed to the example of American footballers kneeling at the playing of the US anthem as a form of protest that should be tolerated. Some also decry the Hong Kong bill as carrying the harshest penalty of any jurisdiction that has a punitive national anthem law, including Russia, Singapore and Malaysia.

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