This
is the English translation of the Preface written by the author for the
Chinese book, 陸恭惠、高禮文(著)、魏磊傑(譯):《香港在中國:重新思考内地與香港關係》,香港城市大學出版社2021年版.
This Chinese book is the translation of Christine Loh and Richard
Cullen, No Third Person: Rewriting the Hong Kong Story (Hong Kong:
Abbreviated Press, 2018. A revised edition of this English book was
published in 2021 under the title Hong Kong in China: Rethinking the
Hong Kong – Mainland Relationship.
What is "one country, two systems"? How should we understand the
relationship between the "high degree of autonomy" of the Hong Kong
Special Administrative Region (HKSAR), state sovereignty and the central
authorities’ “comprehensive jurisdiction” over the HKSAR? What should
be the identity of Hong Kong people? What kind of discourse or narrative
should there be about the "Hong Kong Story"? How should Hong Kong’s
past be understood? What kind of future will Hong Kong have? How could
the path of "one country, two systems" proceed?
In the "post-National Security Law era", this series of issues is
more urgent than at any other time in history, and they are causing
anxiety among many Hong Kong people. Although this book was written
before the enactment of the HKSAR National Security Law, it has fleshed
out these issues and provided preliminary answers to them.
In fact, I believe that in the "post-National Security Law era",
this book is more meaningful, valuable and enlightening to us than it
was at the time of its writing. The authors are Christine Loh and
Richard Cullen. Loh is a public figure in Hong Kong, having served as a
member of the Hong Kong Legislative Council before and after
reunification, and as Undersecretary for the Environment of the HKSAR
Government. Loh is also a scholar and has written many books. Cullen,
from Australia, has taught at the School of Law of City University of
Hong Kong for many years, and in recent years at the Faculty of Law of
The University of Hong Kong. Both authors are intellectuals who have
long lived in Hong Kong, served Hong Kong and love Hong Kong. This book
is the culmination of years of their reflections on Hong Kong's
situation under "one country, two systems", and on the "Hong Kong
story".
The authors point
out in this book that there needs to be a common understanding of Hong
Kong's identity, status, future and destiny. They propose a new
"narrative" of the "Hong Kong story". They point out that Hong Kong's
identity and destiny should not be pinned on its becoming a
Western-style democracy and the realization of the so-called "double
universal suffrage". This is because Hong Kong is not a country but an
inalienable and integral part of the Chinese motherland; Hong Kong
cannot and must not become an independent political entity that
considers itself separate from China. On the contrary, Hong Kong people
must get to know the motherland and try to understand the role that Hong
Kong can play in China’s development.
"Pan-democratic" politicians devote all their energies to building a
Western-style democracy in Hong Kong, but this is not Hong Kong's
destiny. On the other hand, this does not mean that Hong Kong should
become another Chinese city exactly like other big cities in the
mainland. The authors point out that in its history, Hong Kong has been
the meeting point of Chinese and Western cultures, and the confluence of
these cultures has enabled Hong Kong to become a Chinese society in
which many modern ideas and practices that originated in the West have
taken roots. Hong Kong is thus a most valuable asset to the motherland;
as a highly cosmopolitan city, Hong Kong's future remains unbounded.
Under the constitutional framework of "one country, two systems", the
mainland and Hong Kong systems can co-exist, cooperate, make up for each
other's shortcomings, and prosper together in creating a better
tomorrow for the motherland.
I think this book contributes much insight for us in this
"post-National Security era". Some people think that the enactment of
the National Security Law marks the end of “one country, two systems”; I
disagree. Article 23 of the Basic Law of the HKSAR has originally made
it very clear that it is the constitutional responsibility of the HKSAR
to enact laws prohibiting acts that endanger national security, such as
treason, secession, subversion of the Central People's Government (CPG)
and sedition. After the bill to implement Article 23 was shelved in
2003 following the July 1 protest and up until the anti-extradition law
movement of 2019, the CPG never instructed the Chief Executive of the
HKSAR to re-introduce the Article 23 legislation.
At the end of 2007, the Standing Committee of the National People's
Congress (SCNPC) set a timetable for the introduction of universal
suffrage for the election of the Chief Executive (stipulating the target
date of 2017). Contrary to some people’s suggestion, it did not require
Hong Kong to put in place Article 23 legislation as a prerequisite for
the introduction of universal suffrage. It can therefore be seen that
the CPG was very liberal in its Hong Kong policy at that time, and did
not consider the Article 23 legislation to be urgently needed.
It was the “black violence” arising from the anti-extradition law
movement in 2019 that finally led the CPG to believe that, without laws
to safeguard national security, it would be difficult to bring Hong Kong
out of chaos and restore order and stability. But by this time, it was
clear that the crisis of governance precipitated by the riots of 2019
was such that it was totally unrealistic to expect the HKSAR government
to legislate successfully to implement Article 23. In these
circumstances, the CPG and the SCNPC decided to enact a National
Security Law for the HKSAR. As CPG officials have repeatedly stressed,
the National Security Law only establishes the bottom line of the “one
country” element of "one country, two systems", that is, minimum
requirements such as "no secession" and non-subversion of state power.
As long as the bottom line is not transgressed and the minimum
requirements are met, Hong Kong people still retain a wide range of
freedoms, and the "two systems" in "one country, two systems" are still
alive.
In fact, since the
"Occupy Central Movement” in 2014, the project of "one country, two
systems " in Hong Kong went off the rails. The “August 31 (2014)
Decision” of the SCNPC aimed to introduce a viable universal suffrage
model in accordance with Article 45 of the Basic Law (which expressly
provides for nomination by a Nomination Committee of candidates for
Chief Executive election by universal suffrage) as well as the 2007
Decision of the SCNPC on the timetable for universal suffrage in the
election of the Chief Executive. The model was designed to enable Hong
Kong people to elect the Chief Executive by universal suffrage, while
ensuring that the elected Chief Executive would be a patriot whom the
CPG was willing to appoint as Chief Executive. I believe that this
electoral model was well-intentioned. However, opposition politicians
considered that it was not in line with their idea of Western-style
democratic universal suffrage, and firmly opposed it. This opposition
evolved into the "Occupy Central Movement".
In 2015, the electoral reform proposed by the HKSAR government on
the basis of the “August 31 Decision” was rejected by the Legislative
Council as the reform failed to secure the requisite two-thirds
majority. The 2016 Legislative Council elections saw the rise of the
“localists”. Two of them, after being elected into the Council, used the
occasion of the taking of their oaths of office to promote “Hong Kong
independence”. In order to clarify the oath-taking requirement, the
SCNPC promulgated an interpretation of Article 104 of the Basic Law on
the taking of the oath of office, which requires legislators to support
the Basic Law and pledge allegiance to the HKSAR of the People's
Republic of China. The failure of some “localist” legislators to take
their oath properly led to their being disqualified in accordance with
relevant judicial decisions.
Some critics saw this development as a sign of the CPG’s narrowing of
the space for "one country, two systems". But the reality was that there
were no Hong Kong independence advocates entering the Legislative
Council before 2016, so there was no need for the CPG to intervene and
to interpret the oath-taking requirement. In my view, the 2016 SCNPC
interpretation did not amount to a deliberate tightening of the CPG’s
policy towards Hong Kong. Rather, it was a response on the part of the
CPG to what it considered to be a rapidly deteriorating political
situation in Hong Kong, and it did no more than setting the necessary
bottom line that the CPG considered tolerable.
The proposed amendment of the Fugitive Offenders Ordinance in 2019
was also regarded by some members of the community as a manifestation of
the CPG's tightening of the "one country, two systems" policy; and they
believed that, if the amendment were successful, any Hong Kong person
could be extradited to the mainland for trial on suspicion of breaking
the law. Although many people in the “yellow” camp held that view, I
disagree with them. The reason for the proposed amendment was the Chan
Tong-kai case, in which Chan was suspected of (and subsequently
confessed to) killing his girlfriend in Taiwan. If there was no such
case, there would not have been an extradition bill. After Chan's return
to Hong Kong, the Taiwan authorities requested his extradition.
However, the existing Hong Kong law did not allow extradition between
Hong Kong and any other region of China, and Taiwan is a region of China
under Hong Kong law. Therefore, the HKSAR Government proposed to amend
the provisions of the existing Fugitive Offenders Ordinance to establish
a "case-by-case" (rather than treaty-based) extradition mechanism which
could be applied as between Hong Kong and any jurisdiction that did not
have an extradition treaty with Hong Kong, including more than 100
countries, mainland China, Macau and Taiwan. The proposed extradition
arrangement would apply only to serious criminal offences, and the
principle of non-extradition of political offenders and other safeguards
in the existing legislation would remain unchanged. This proposed
amendment was put forward by the HKSAR Government on its own initiative;
it was not a piece of legislation that the CPG required or instructed
the HKSAR government to enact. It is noteworthy that in the Macau SAR,
there was also no law that enabled extradition as between Macau and the
Chinese mainland.
Extradition is a globally accepted arrangement for international
cooperation in fighting crime, aimed at ensuring that persons who commit
crimes in one country can still be brought to justice when they flee to
another country. It was a misperception that the purpose of the 2019
amendment was to reduce the freedom and human rights of Hong Kong
people, and that the amendment was an “evil law”. Furthermore, in
mid-June 2019, a few days after the anti-extradition law movement
escalated into a violent confrontation between the police and
demonstrators, the HKSAR Government announced that it would shelve the
legislative exercise indefinitely, and subsequently announced the
withdrawal of the bill altogether. But the movement and civil unrest
continued, with more and more violence and rioting that lasted for
several months. This was completely beyond the original scope of the
campaign to oppose the extradition bill.
Events from the "Occupy Central Movement" to anti-extradition law,
and from anti-extradition law to large-scale and prolonged “black
violence”, showed that the project of "one country, two systems " had
been seriously derailed. Some people say that the National Security Law
is only "rule by law" rather than "the rule of law". I think that if we
want to "cure the disease" rather than merely to deal with its symptoms,
we must re-invent the discourse or narrative of "one country, two
systems". This is exactly the subject explored in this book. As the
authors point out, if Hong Kong is to have a new discourse, a new
narrative and a new self-awareness of "one country, two systems", and if
past mistakes or deviations are to be rectified, we must first
understand the reality of Hong Kong as part of China.
Hong Kong is part of China, and China is a great power in the world
today, and an important member of the international community. China's
relationship with other countries largely determines Hong Kong's
relationship with other countries. During the 2019 anti-extradition law
movement, there were scenes of countless American flags being displayed
or waved during demonstrations; some people actually believed that they
could rely on foreign forces to support their political demands on the
Hong Kong government.
As we
all know, the relationship between China and the United States is not
only competitive, but has also become more confrontational in recent
years. A situation of a "New Cold War” seems to be emerging. Hong Kong
people will have to choose either to side with China or with the United
States. Most of us Hong Kong people are Chinese citizens, and of course
we should be on China's side. Any discourse or narrative of Hong Kong
under “one country, two systems” must take this as its point of
departure, and this is also the view of the authors of this book.
I sincerely hope that in the coming days, Hong Kong society will
return to rationality, mend the relationship between Hong Kong and the
mainland, and re-invent a healthy discourse or narrative about Hong Kong
under "one country, two systems" that can foster a “win-win” scenario
for Hong Kong and the Mainland. This, I believe, is the only way in
which we, the people of Hong Kong and our next generation, can continue
to live and prosper in Hong Kong – this beloved home of ours.
Professor Albert H.Y. Chen
Faculty of Law, University of Hong Kong
July 2021
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