Selasa, 30 Juni 2020

WHO to send second team into China to seek coronavirus source - South China Morning Post

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  1. WHO to send second team into China to seek coronavirus source  South China Morning Post
  2. WHO sending team to China to investigate origins of coronavirus  CNA
  3. WHO: Countries complaining about contact tracing are 'lame'  Yahoo Singapore News
  4. WHO's Tedros - 'This is not even close to being over'  TODAYonline
  5. COVID-19 pandemic 'is not even close to being over': WHO chief  CNA
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

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2020-06-30 08:07:59Z
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Beijing passes Hong Kong national security law: Government adviser - straits times

BEIJING – China’s top lawmaking body on Tuesday (June 30) passed a Hong Kong national security law that will ban subversion and secession, a senior adviser to Beijing on Hong Kong said. 

“I have been told that the law was passed unanimously, all 162 votes,” Professor Lau Siu-kai told The Straits Times. 

That all 162 members of the National People’s Congress Standing Committee voted in favour of the law shows China’s strong will to close the legal loophole in Hong Kong, he said. 

Since it was first proposed at the start of China’s annual parliamentary meetings late last month, the law has gone through a truncated legislative process, passing in just over 40 days. 

The process has bypassed Hong Kong’s Legislative Council, the local legislature, and the law will be inserted into the city’s mini Constitution, the Basic law. 

The national security law will be a “new start” for Hong Kong, the nationalistic Global Times tabloid wrote in an editorial, but there will still be struggles.

“Chinese society, including Hong Kong society, must be prepared to support the enforcement of the law in the city after it is passed, to punish a few diehards who have been committed to jeopardising national security, and to fight some tough battles against US interference in Hong Kong, to truly establish a line of defence on national security there,” it wrote. 

A new national security agency, reporting directly to Beijing, will be set up under the ambit of the new law, while a national security committee chaired by the Hong Kong Chief Executive will be set up to implement the law.

But the legislation’s passage has been met with strong resistance by Western governments and the pro-democracy camp in Hong Kong, who say it represents an end of the One Country, Two Systems principle that has governed the city since its return to China in 1997. 

The United States has said it will end Hong Kong’s special trading status, which means the territory will be subjected to the same tariffs as mainland China. 

Hong Kong leader Carrie Lam said on Tuesday that this will have minimal impact on the city. 

According to details of a draft released two weeks ago, the law will ban secession, subversion, terrorism and colluding with foreign forces to harm national security.

Beijing has been infuriated by pro-democracy protests that have rocked the city for nearly a year, insisting it is the work of foreign forces. 

Hong Kongers and protest organisers say the protests, which have often resulted in violent street battles between demonstrators and police, is a manifestation of the simmering anger at the government. 

Analysts have said the law is likely to come into effect on July 1, the anniversary of the former British colony’s return to China, and traditionally a day of anti-government protests.
 

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2020-06-30 04:43:52Z
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Hong Kong activist Joshua Wong quits democracy group Demosisto - CNA

HONG KONG: Hong Kong activist Joshua Wong said on Tuesday (Jun 30) he is stepping down as leader of his democracy group Demosisto, just hours after local media reported that Beijing had passed national security legislation for the city.

Wong has said he would be a "prime target" of Beijing's national security law, which critics fear would crush freedoms in the former British colony.

Chinese and Hong Kong authorities have said the law is necessary to tackle separatism, subversion, terrorism and collusion with foreign forces following anti-government protests that escalated in June last year.

Wong has rallied support for Hong Kong's pro-democracy movement overseas, in particular in the United States, drawing the wrath of Beijing, which says he is a "black hand" of foreign forces.

"If my voice will not be heard soon, I hope that the international community will continue to speak up for Hong Kong and step up concrete efforts to defend our last bit of freedom," Wong said on his Twitter feed.

Demosisto members Nathan Law and Agnes Chow also said they were stepping down from the group.

"The struggle of Hong Kong people will not stop, it will only continue with a more determined attitude," Law said in a Facebook post.

The South China Morning Post newspaper, quoting an unidentified source, said China's official news agency Xinhua would publish details of the law later on Tuesday and Hong Kong officials would gather at the office of Beijing's top representative in the city later for a meeting on the legislation.

The draft law has alarmed some foreign governments and Hong Kong's democracy activists.

They are concerned that Beijing is eroding the high degree of autonomy granted to the former British colony when it was returned to Chinese rule in 1997.

China says the national security law will target only a small group of troublemakers and people who abide by the legislation have no reason to worry. 

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2020-06-30 03:54:28Z
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Senin, 29 Juni 2020

China's Parliament passes Hong Kong national security legislation - The Straits Times

HONG KONG (BLOOMBERG, REUTERS) - China’s top legislative body approved new national security legislation for Hong Kong, a sweeping attempt to quell dissent that risks United States retaliation and the city’s appeal as a financial hub. 

The National People’s Congress Standing Committee voted unanimously to approve the law on the former British colony when it wrapped up a three-day meeting on Tuesday (June 30) in Beijing, multiple Hong Kong media organisations reported, citing unidentified people.

That would enact the measure to punish acts of secession, subversion, terrorism and collusion with foreign forces in time for the July 1 anniversary of Hong Kong’s return to Chinese rule in 1997. 

The symbolic date is usually marked by mass protests, including a largely peaceful pro-democracy march that attracted more than 500,000 people last year before a small faction ransacked the city’s legislature.

The organiser of the march is making a last-minute appeal to hold the event, after being denied permission by police, who cited coronavirus risk and the potential for violence.

Hong Kong leader Carrie Lam said on Tuesday that it was not appropriate for her to comment on the legislation for the city, as a meeting in Beijing to discuss the law is still ongoing. 

Mrs Lam acknowledged there had been widespread public speculation and concern regarding the legislation and she would comment once details were unveiled. 

The new law will shape the future of Hong Kong, whose civil liberties, free markets and independent judicial system have attracted hundreds of international companies.

President Donald Trump warned last month the US would start rolling back Hong Kong’s preferential trade status, while Britain and Taiwan have offered new paths to residency for the city’s 7.5 million inhabitants. 

Hong Kong’s freedoms have become increasingly tenuous as President Xi Jinping grows more confident in China’s ability to withstand foreign pressure and Hong Kong protesters embrace more radical positions such as independence.

Beijing’s steady moves to better integrate the city boiled over into historic and sometimes violent protests last year, after Mrs Lam attempted to pass a Bill allowing extraditions to the mainland. 

The new law goes further toward revising the “one country, two systems” framework designed to protect Hong Kong’s liberal institutions and Common Law legal system.

The legislation will let Chinese security agents operate in Hong Kong, allow China to prosecute some cases and give Mrs Lam the power to pick judges to hear national security matters. 

“You have in Hong Kong the Common Law system and imposing on it what passes as the law in China will produce chaos which will be intolerable for the people of Hong Kong and eventually will be intolerable for business, as well,” Mr Chris Patten, the territory’s last colonial governor, told Bloomberg Television on Monday.

“Hong Kong represents all those aspects of liberal democracy which Xi Jinping so hates.”

Chinese officials have said the law is necessary to ensure peace following last year’s chaos, which included vandalism of subway stations, regular use of Molotov cocktails and a brief occupation of Hong Kong’s international airport.

China has also said that only an “extremely small” number of people will be affected by the law. 

That has done little to reassure democracy advocates, who fear they could be jailed for expressing dissent, or for businesses that worry about executives getting tried before mainland courts.

Hong Kong police arrested 53 people on Sunday, saying they attended an unlawful assembly. 

Surveys show a majority of Hong Kong residents oppose the law.

The American Chamber of Commerce in Hong Kong said more than 80 per cent of the companies it surveyed were concerned or very concerned about the legislation – although some companies have begun to endorse the law after HSBC came under pressure for remaining silent and backed it. 

The law brings yet more uncertainty as Hong Kong faces its deepest recession on record after last year’s protests and the global pandemic.

Unemployment has risen to a 15-year high, while investors are putting money elsewhere.

Some expatriates and Hong Kong residents have said they’re considering leaving the city. 

China didn’t publish the full draft law or allow a public debate over the law, which is required under the Basic Law, Hong Kong’s mini-Constitution.

The process also bypassed Hong Kong’s elected Legislative Council. Even Mrs Lam acknowledged last week that she hadn’t seen a full draft. 

Opposition lawmakers have expressed concern the law will be used to bar them from seeking office in an upcoming legislative election in September. Those fears were elevated after the city’s only representative to the NPC Standing Committee said candidates who opposed its passage should be disqualified. 

“As long as people abide by the law, I suppose we never have to use this piece of legislation,” Bernard Chan, a convener of Hong Kong’s advisory Executive Council, told Bloomberg Television on Monday. “It really is to warn people: Do not cross those red lines. You cannot ask for Hong Kong independence and we do not tolerate terrorist acts like what happened last year during the social unrest.”

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2020-06-30 01:55:54Z
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China passes national security law for Hong Kong, Cable TV says - CNA

HONG KONG: China's parliament passed national security legislation for Hong Kong on Tuesday (Jun 30), the city's Cable TV reported.

It sets the stage for the most radical change to the former British colony's way of life since it returned to Chinese rule in 1997.

Cable TV, citing an unidentified source, said the law was passed unanimously by the Standing Committee of China's National People's Congress.

Beijing introduced the law in response to last year's often-violent pro-democracy protests in the city. It will tackle subversion, terrorism, separatism and collusion with foreign forces, officials have said.

A draft of the law, which will come into force as soon as it is gazetted in Hong Kong, has yet to be published. 

Hundreds of Hong Kongers marched silently through the city's streets on Sunday in protest against the law. 

Riot police armed with shields were present as the crowd moved from Jordan to Mong Kok in the Kowloon district, as part of a "silent protest", in which they marched but the usual chanting or slogan shouting was mainly absent.

The event came a day after Hong Kong police refused permission for an annual march that is held on Jul 1 to mark the handover of the city from Britain to Chinese authorities 23 years ago.

Police cited in a statement that a march would be in violation of Hong Kong's current ban of groups of more than 50 people gathering which was put in place as a result of the coronavirus pandemic.

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2020-06-30 01:55:03Z
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US ends defence exports to Hong Kong, looking to more restrictions - CNA

WASHINGTON, DC: The United States is ending defence exports to Hong Kong and is considering further restrictions on trade with the territory, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said on Monday (Jun 29).

China recently moved to impose new security legislation that has raised concerns among Hong Kong democracy activists that Beijing is further eroding the extensive autonomy promised when Britain handed the territory back to China in 1997.

"The Chinese Communist Party’s decision to eviscerate Hong Kong’s freedoms has forced the Trump administration to re-evaluate its policies toward the territory," Pompeo said.

He said the United States, effective Monday, was ending exports of defence equipment to Hong Kong and will also take steps to end the export of dual-use technologies to the territory. Dual-use technologies have both commercial and military uses.

The announcements come at a time of intensified US rhetoric against Beijing as President Donald Trump campaigns for re-election. Opinion polls have shown voters increasingly embittered toward China, especially over the coronavirus, which began there.

"The United States is forced to take this action to protect US national security. We can no longer distinguish between the export of controlled items to Hong Kong or to mainland China," Pompeo said.

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2020-06-29 21:24:49Z
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COVID-19 pandemic 'is not even close to being over': WHO chief - CNA

GENEVA: The COVID-19 pandemic is not even close to being over, World Health Organization chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told a briefing on Monday (Jun 29).

Tedros noted that, six months after China first alerted the WHO to a novel respiratory infection, the grim milestones of 10 million confirmed infections and 500,000 deaths had been reached.

"Most people remain susceptible, the virus still has a lot of room to move," he said.

"We all want this to be over. We all want to get on with our lives. But the hard reality is that this is not even close to being over. Although many countries have made some progress globally, the pandemic is actually speeding up."

The head of the WHO's emergencies programme, Mike Ryan, told the briefing that tremendous progress had been made towards finding a safe and effective vaccine to prevent infection, but there was still no guarantee the effort would succeed.

In the meantime, countries could fight the spread of the disease by testing, isolating confirmed cases and tracking their contacts, he said. 

He singled out Japan, South Korea and Germany for their "comprehensive, sustained strategy" against the virus.

The WHO plans to convene a meeting this week to assess progress in research towards fighting the disease, Tedros said.

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2020-06-29 17:18:53Z
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