Beijing has held complete control of the Election Committee since the HK National Security Law came into effect in 2020, stamping out all dissenting voices.
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Pro-democracy protesters are surrounded by police officers as they carry banner against the chief executive election near a polling station in Hong Kong, Sunday, May 8, 2022. A Hong Kong election committee is voting Sunday for the city's only leadership candidate, John Lee, who is widely expected to win and become Hong Kong's next chief executive. The banner reads "Human rights is higher than the regime. One person, one vote for the chief executive, immediately implement universal suffrage." (AP Photo/Kin Cheung)

TAIPEI — John Lee, backed by Chinese President Xi Jinping’s leadership, was elected Hong Kong’s Chief Executive with more than 99% of the votes at the chief executive election on May 8. 

A Hong Kong democracy activist living in Taiwan criticized the election, saying, “Choosing who to support out of multiple candidates is a basic principle of democracy. But a situation where one person secures almost all the votes cannot be called an election.”

Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam attends a new conference with Chief Executive-elect John Lee, in Hong Kong, China, May 9, 2022. REUTERS/Tyrone Siu

The incumbent Chief Executive Carrie Lam and her predecessor Leung Chun-ying — both said to have been internally picked by Beijing — each won 67% and 66% of the votes in the 2017 election and the 2012 election, respectively. More than 30% of the Election Committee, including democrats who were against the Beijing-backed candidates, voiced their opposition through their votes.

However, since the Hong Kong National Security Law came into effect in 2020, the Chinese central government in Beijing has held complete control of the Election Committee, stamping out all dissenting voices.

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On May 9, the day after his election, Lee met Carrie Lam and visited the Hong Kong Liaison Office (the Chinese government’s agency in Hong Kong which reports to the State Council of China) and the Chinese People’s Liberation Army Hong Kong Garrison. There he gave a victory speech, which reiterated his intention to place importance on China. 

Human rights activists in Hong Kong are concerned that the crackdown on the democracy movement will become even more severe under Lee, who is beholden to Beijing. That in turn could exacerbate the human rights situation in Hong Kong.

Riot police officers in force as anti-national security law protesters march during the anniversary of Hong Kong's handover to China from Britain, July 1, 2020. REUTERS/Tyrone Siu

They are also concerned that Hong Kong will be subsumed into China’s Guangdong Province, with the Greater Bay Area (GBA) initiative promoted under Xi’s leadership to integrate Hong Kong, Macau, and China’s Guangdong Province moving ahead at a rapid pace.

Xi’s leadership has already announced that it wants to invite young people from Hong Kong and Macau to Guangdong Province to “increase their sense of belonging to the motherland” through education and employment. Fears are growing that Hong Kong will further lose its identity and completely become “China’s Hong Kong.”

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(Read the article in Japanese at this link.)

Author: Akio Yaita

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