China criticises US offer of safe haven for Hong Kong residents

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China Criticises Us Offer Of Safe Haven For Hong Kong Residents
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By Ben Fox, Associated Press

Chinese officials has attacked a US offer of temporary refuge for people from Hong Kong as a “vain attempt to stigmatise” the semi-autonomous city and the central government in Beijing.

The statement from China’s foreign ministry office in Hong Kong came hours after US president Joe Biden made the offer in response to Beijing’s increasing moves to tighten its control and crush the pro-democracy opposition.

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Mr Biden signed a memorandum allowing people from Hong Kong currently residing in the United States to live and work in the country for 18 months, in direct response to Hong Kong’s sweeping new national security law and other measures that undercut the rights promised when the former British colony was handed back to China in 1997.

It also comes as China and the US are at odds over a range of foreign policy and trade issues.

The Chinese foreign ministry said Mr Biden’s move “slandered and smeared Hong Kong’s national security law, nakedly intervened in Hong Kong affairs and China’s internal affairs, and blatantly trampled on international law and the basic norms of international relations”.

The US was “weaving lies and slandering Hong Kong’s national security laws, blatantly beautifying the anti-China chaos in Hong Kong, and presumptuously offering the so-called ‘safe haven’,” the ministry said.

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Biden
President Joe Biden has granted refuge to Hong Kong residents living in the US (Susan Walsh/AP)

“It is a vain attempt to stigmatise Hong Kong, stigmatise China, and stop at nothing to undermine Hong Kong through petty actions.”

The people of Hong Kong and China would respond to such “shameless political manipulation” which is “doomed to failure,” said the statement, attributed to an unidentified spokesperson and posted on the office’s website.

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The safe haven offer is the latest in a series of steps taken by the administration in response to Beijing’s crackdown, including suspending an extradition treaty with the territory and other special treatment not extended to the rest of China, along with imposing visa bans on Hong Kong and Chinese officials and cutting them off from the US financial system.

“Given the politically motivated arrests and trials, the silencing of the media, and the diminishing space for elections and democratic opposition, we will continue to take steps in support of people in Hong Kong,” White House press secretary Jen Psaki said.

China imposed the national security law on Hong Kong in response to months of pro-democracy street protests in 2019.

Police have arrested at least 100 opposition politicians, activists and demonstrators, imposed severe limits on political speech, reorganised the local legislature to ensure an overwhelming pro-Beijing majority and demanded that anyone holding public officer prove their loyalty to China.

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Pro-democracy activists in exile pleaded with US congress last month to pass legislation to provide both temporary refuge and permanent refugee status in the US, after Hong Kong police confirmed they had a list of more than 50 people who would be arrested if they attempted to leave.

There are several thousand people from Hong Kong in the United States who would be eligible to remain and avoid being deported under what is formally known as deferred enforced departure, according to the Department of Homeland Security.

Ms Psaki did not rule out extending refuge beyond 18 months depending on developments in Hong Kong.

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