Q & A

Reasons for the discord in HK over national anthem Bill

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Hong Kong riot police fired pepper pellets to disperse protesters in the heart of the global financial center on Wednesday (May 27), as new national security laws proposed by Beijing revived anti-government demonstrations.
Pro-democracy legislator Tanya Chan speaking as other lawmakers display placards criticising the "destruction" of the One Country, Two Systems principle during the second reading of the National Anthem Bill at a Legislative Council meeting yesterday.
Pro-democracy legislator Tanya Chan speaking as other lawmakers display placards criticising the "destruction" of the One Country, Two Systems principle during the second reading of the National Anthem Bill at a Legislative Council meeting yesterday. PHOTO: BLOOMBERG

HONG KONG • Hong Kong's legislature is moving forward on a controversial Bill that would criminalise abuse of China's national anthem.

The Legislative Council yesterday afternoon started the debate on the national anthem Bill, which is expected to last four days.

1 WHAT IS IT?

Hong Kong's National Anthem Bill, if passed into law by the legislature, will govern the use and playing of the Chinese national anthem.

This includes provisions that threaten to punish those who insult the anthem with up to three years in jail and/or fines of up to HK$50,000 (S$9,100).

The Bill states that "all individuals and organisations" should respect and dignify the national anthem, and play it and sing it on "appropriate occasions".

It also orders that primary and secondary schoolchildren be taught to sing it, along with its history and etiquette.

2 WHY IS IT CONTROVERSIAL?

Anti-government protests last year were aimed primarily at resisting further integration with mainland China. The Chinese national anthem has been booed at several events, including football matches.

Protesters and pro-democracy politicians say the Bill is another sign of what they see as accelerating interference from Beijing in the former British colony.

Britain handed Hong Kong back to China's rule in 1997.

The "one country, two systems" policy agreed between Britain and China for the handover guarantees the retention of Hong Kong's legal, financial and political systems for 50 years.

The freedoms of speech, press, association and demonstration are explicitly written into the Basic Law, the mini-Constitution that guides Hong Kong's relationship with its Chinese sovereign - freedoms that opponents of the Bill now say are under threat.

More technically, some senior lawyers fear the Bill is highly unusual in that it, in part, reflects the ideological aspirations of China's Communist Party that might prove difficult to enforce.

"It is the first Hong Kong law I've seen that looks like it was written in Beijing," one senior judge told Reuters in private recently. "It will be a nightmare to rule on."

The Hong Kong Bar Association, while acknowledging the need for such laws, said parts of the Bill "deviate from the good traditions" of Hong Kong's common law system.

It said there was a fundamental difference between that system and the "socialist legal system of mainland China which would include political ideology and conceptual guidance".

3 WHERE DID IT COME FROM?

For years, Chinese officials and their pro-Beijing allies in Hong Kong have wanted to instil a greater sense of patriotic pride among the people in Hong Kong.

Hong Kong's government says its Bill reflects the city's own legal system and situation.

"The main spirit of the… Bill is 'respect', which bears absolutely no relation to 'restricting freedom of speech' as claimed by certain members of the community and definitely not a so-called 'evil law'," a spokesman said earlier this year.

4 WHAT'S NEXT?

Further protests and intense legislative infighting over the Bill are widely expected.

The government, under pressure from Beijing, says the Bill is now a priority to be passed into law before the end of this four-year legislative session in July.

Having been mired in a log-jam of legislative procedural battles, the Bill could face a third reading after yesterday's proceedings, and possibly a vote early next month.

If it misses the deadline, the government would then have to decide whether to re-introduce the Bill in the next session or force it into law by promulgation, an option which is seen as highly unusual and potentially explosive. Deeper public consultation and a re-draft would be the alternative.

In the longer term, if the Bill becomes law and is enforced, constitutional challenges can be expected in courts - both into the Bill's content, and the procedural battles through which it passed.

REUTERS

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A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on May 28, 2020, with the headline Reasons for the discord in HK over national anthem Bill. Subscribe