The flags of China and Hong Kong displayed in rows.
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China’s embassy hit again in opposition to U.S. criticism of Hong Kong’s new nationwide safety regulation on Thursday, saying the U.S. ought to “respect China’s sovereignty.”
Hong Kong lawmakers handed a new nationwide safety regulation on Tuesday which critics say grants the federal government extra energy to quash dissent.
The regulation consists of stringent penalties for a variety of actions together with “treason” and “rebellion” that are punishable by life imprisonment.
Following the announcement, the U.S. State Division described the threats outlined within the regulation as “poorly outlined and extremely imprecise.”
“We consider that these sorts of actions have the potential to speed up the closing of Hong Kong’s as soon as open society,” spokesperson Vedant Patel stated.
China’s embassy within the U.S. responded by saying that different international locations shouldn’t intervene in its affairs.
“Hong Kong is China’s Hong Kong. Hong Kong affairs are purely China’s inside affairs, which no nation is within the place to level fingers at or intervene in,” a spokesperson stated on Wednesday.
“We urge the U.S. facet to respect China’s sovereignty, adhere to the rules guiding the worldwide regulation and the fundamental norms governing worldwide relations, and instantly cease interfering in Hong Kong affairs that are China’s inside affairs.”
Hong Kong’s Legislative Council had launched the invoice referred to as Article 23 on March 8 and Chief Govt John Lee had urged to cross the regulation “as quickly as potential” amid an “more and more advanced” geopolitics backdrop.
Earlier this month, China’s International Minister Wang Yi stated the U.S. had been devising “new methods to suppress China,” and its accusations in opposition to Beijing had reached an “unbelievable diploma.”
“There may be some progress within the China-U.S. bilateral relationship, however we’ve got to level out that U.S. continues to stick with a improper understanding of China,” he stated.
— CNBC’s Evelyn Cheng and Clement Tan contributed to this story.