From News Nation:
“U.S.
imposes sanctions on four Chinese officials over Hong Kong crackdown”
The United
States on Monday imposed sanctions on four more Chinese officials in Hong
Kong’s governing and security establishment over their alleged role in crushing
dissent in the former British colony. The U.S. Treasury and State Department
identified the four as Deng Zhonghua, deputy director of the Hong Kong and
Macau Affairs Office; Edwina Lau, deputy commissioner of police in Hong Kong,
and Li Jiangzhou and Li Kwai-wah, two officials at the newly established
national security office in Hong Kong.
U.S. Secretary
of State Mike Pompeo said the sanctions were for their role in implementing
Hong Kong’s new national security law. He said they would be barred from
traveling to the United States, and any U.S.-related assets would be blocked. “These
actions underscore U.S. resolve to hold accountable key figures that are
actively eviscerating the freedoms of the people of Hong Kong and undermining
Hong Kong’s autonomy,” he said in a statement. None of the four could be
reached immediately for comment. Washington has called China’s enactment of a
new national security law in Hong Kong this year an unacceptable breach of
China’s “one country, two systems” commitment to what was once China’s freest
city. The designations are the first sanctions imposed on China since Democrat
Joe Biden defeated President Donald Trump in last week’s U.S. election. Biden
is due to take office on Jan. 20. Trump so far has refused to concede defeat. In
actions heralding a more authoritarian era for Hong Kong, China opened a new national
security office in July, a week after imposing the new national security
legislation to punish what it called crimes of secession, subversion, terrorism
and collusion with foreign forces with up to life in prison.
Last month, the
U.S. State Department warned international financial institutions doing
business with individuals deemed responsible for China’s crackdown in Hong Kong
that they could soon face tough sanctions. Washington put sanctions on Carrie
Lam, the territory’s current and former police chiefs and other top officials
in August for what it said was their role in curtailing freedoms in a crackdown
on the territory’s pro-democracy movement. Relations between the United States
and China, the world’s two biggest economies, plunged to the lowest point in
decades in the run-up to last week’s U.S. election. The two sides are at odds
on a wide range of issues including China’s handling of the coronavirus
pandemic and its treatment of Hong Kong.
^ Hopefully
Biden will continue with this policy once he’s in office. Beijing needs to know
it can not violate the One Country, Two Systems Handover Agreement until the 50
years are up in 2047. ^
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