LONDON: Britain on Monday risked worsening strained ties with China
LONDON: Britain on Monday risked worsening strained
ties with China, as it suspended its extradition treaty with Hong Kong in
protest at a controversial new security law in the territory.
Foreign Secretary Dominic
Raab confirmed the widely expected move in parliament, despite Chinese warnings
that Britain was making a grave foreign policy error and risked reprisals.
He also announced an
extension to Hong Kong of an arms embargo of “potentially lethal weapons”
already in force against mainland China for the last three decades.
Diplomatic ties between
London and Beijing have been frayed by the security law, which Western powers
see as an erosion on civil liberties and human rights in the financial hub.
China threatened unspecified counter-measures after
Britain relaxed immigration rules for Hong Kongers with British
overseas passports, and the potential of citizenship.
Adding to the tensions have
been British criticisms about China’s treatment of the Uighur ethnic minority
group, and the blocking of telecoms giant Huawei from its 5G networks.
Raab said Britain wanted
to engage constructively with China, acknowledging its “extraordinary transformation”
and the key role it had to play in world affairs.
But he said a positive
relationship with a country that had international obligations as a global
player also included the right to disagree.
The security law had
“significantly changed key assumptions underpinning our extradition treaty”,
particularly a provision to try certain cases in mainland China, he said. The
legislation does not provide legal or judicial safeguards, and there was
concern about its potential use in the former British territory, he added.
“The government has
decided to suspend the extradition treaty immediately and indefinitely,” he
said. “We would not consider reacting to it unless and until there are clear
and robust safeguards.”
Raab said there was also
cause for concern about the extent to which China was playing a role in law
enforcement and internal security in semi-autonomous Hong Kong. “The UK will
extend to Hong Kong the arms embargo that we’ve applied to mainland China since
1989,” he told lawmakers.
“The extension of this
embargo will mean that there will be no exports from the UK to Hong Kong of
potentially lethal weapons, components or ammunition.
“And it will also mean a
ban on the export of any equipment already banned, which might be used for
internal repression.” Wang Wenbin, spokesman for China’s foreign ministry,
earlier warned Britain of reprisals for meddling in its internal affairs, and
called criticisms of its Uighur policy “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.” Britain’s extradition treaty suspension comes
after similar tough action against China by the United States, Canada and
Australia.
Beijing has accused
London of being a puppet to US foreign policy over Huawei, after
Washington slapped sanctions on the Chinese firm’s access to US chips vital to
its 5G networks.
The United States
believes the private firm is a front for the Chinese state, and that the use of
its technology could imperil intelligence sharing, charges that the company
denies.
The issue is likely to
loom large during US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo’s visit to London on
Tuesday.
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