China says Britain going down ‘wrong path’ over Hong Kong

London and Beijing have been at loggerheads since China passed a controversial new security law for the former British colony of Hong Kong.

BEIJING: China warned Monday (Jul 20) that Britain was heading down “a wrong path” as Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab was expected to announce the suspension of an extradition treaty with Hong Kong, raising tensions between the countries.

Wang Wenbin, spokesman for China’s foreign ministry, told a regular press briefing that Beijing would “firmly counter” any interference in its internal affairs, also slamming suggestions it was mistreating minorities in Xinjiang as “slander”.

“We urge the UK not to go further down this wrong path, in order to avoid further damage to China-UK relations,” Wang said.

“Recent erroneous remarks and measures concerning Hong Kong have seriously violated international law and basic norms governing international relations … China strongly condemns this and firmly opposes it.”

A new security law imposed by China on Hong Kong last month has drawn widespread criticism in Britain and elsewhere, and Raab is due later Monday to announce a package of measures similar to those already introduced by the United States, Canada and Australia.

They are expected to include the suspension of an extradition treaty.

Tensions between Hong Kong’s former and current rulers have soared over a number of topics recently.

Britain recently bowed to sustained pressure from Washington and ordered the phased removal of Chinese telecoms giant Huawei from its 5G network despite warnings of retaliation from Beijing.

Britain’s Supreme Court president, meanwhile, suggested last week that the two British judges serving in Hong Kong’s Court of Final Appeal – under the terms of the territory’s handover agreement with China in 1997 – could stand down unless the rule of law was guaranteed in the semi-autonomous city.

Wang said Beijing would “oppose interference in Hong Kong affairs by outside forces” and that judicial independence was “not affected” by the new security law.

He also hit back at comments by Raab that accused Beijing of human rights abuses against ethnic and religious minorities in the northwest region of Xinjiang.

Raab told the BBC on Sunday that it was “clear that there are gross, egregious human rights abuses going on … it is deeply, deeply troubling”.

Wang called the comments “nothing but rumours and slander”.

“The Xinjiang issue is not about human rights, religions or ethnic groups at all, but about combating violence, terrorism and separatism,” he said.

Rights groups and experts estimate that more than one million ethnic Uighurs and other mostly Muslim minorities have been rounded up into a network of internment camps, which China says are facilities for job-training and to steer people away from extremism.

Raab said reports of forced sterilisations and mass detentions in Xinjiang required international attention, and that Britain “cannot see behaviour like that and not call it out”.

But Wang said the forced-sterilisation reports were “complete nonsense”, and that the Uighur population had more than doubled in the past four decades.

Exiled Uighurs this month called for the International Criminal Court in the Hague to investigate China for genocide.

Z24 News

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

Next Post

Indian budget airline IndiGo lays off 10% of staff over pandemic

Mon Jul 20 , 2020
NEW DELHI: India’s largest budget airline IndiGo said on Monday (Jul 20) it was laying off 10 per cent of its workforce in the wake of the financial fallout from the coronavirus pandemic. IndiGo rose quickly to capture nearly half the domestic market in recent years, reaping big profits on […]

Share

Social menu is not set. You need to create menu and assign it to Social Menu on Menu Settings.