The
Hong Kong Democracy Controversy
By
Henry C.K. Liu
Some political controversies are
just tempests in a teacup. The Hong Kong
democracy controversy is a
tempest in an empty teacup.
Democracy
as
an abstract concept, like motherhood, is supported by everyone. But
democracy,
like motherhood, comes in many forms in reality. Motherhood can be from
happy
marriages, from unwed mothers, from rape victims or from women with
genetic
defects or mental problems. Thus motherhood can occur in a variety of
social
contexts that affects its desirability. Timing is also a key factor
affecting
its desirability. The same is true about democracy. Universal suffrage
is
necessary for democracy, but democracy is not always an inevitable
outcome from
universal suffrage. Universal suffrage failed to end residual
institutional slavery
in the US long after emancipation had been brought about by the Civil
War. Universal
suffrage under dire economic conditions and social despair produced a
fascist dictatorship
in Weimar Germany. US promotion of
democracy around the world is blatantly selective. In
February 2004, US Marines kidnapped and
deposed democratically elected President Jean-Bertrand Aristide of
Haiti. To
the chagrin of US imperialists who are more comfortable with rightwing
dictatorships, universal suffrage is producing a rising number of
populist
governments around the world, most visibly in Latin America, which the
US
openly works to overthrow. An influential leader of the US religious
right, Pat
Robertson, who can be viewed regularly on Hong Kong television through
his Christian
Broadcasting Network (CBN) and the 700 Club program, publicly and
un-Christianly called for the assassination of Hugo Chavez, the
democratically
elected leftist president of Venezuela.
Democracy in the context of a
world order of sovereign states
needs a requisite socio-political milieu of national unity, loyalty to
sovereign and social harmony. Democracy
operates
only under loyal opposition, not foreign-supported political
insurgents. In
colonial Hong Kong, national pride and loyalty to the motherland had
been
systemically erased by a century and a half of British imperialistic
rule.
Until residual colonial mentality is effectively expunged, universal
suffrage
will not enhance true democracy in Hong Kong. Under current conditions,
it may take
a generation or more before Hong Kong can shed its ingrained colonial
mindset.
Premature, misapplied and irresponsible universal suffrage for Hong
Kong will
only be manipulated by a disloyal opposition to give neo-colonialism a
new
life.
The National People's Congress (NPC) Standing Committee’s
April 2004 decision on electoral reform in Hong Kong has ruled out
universal
suffrage in the 2007 Chief Executive and 2008 Legislative Council
(Legco)
elections. This decision has been made in strict accordance with the
Basic Law,
Hong Kong’s mini-constitution. The Hong Kong Government’s
Constitutional Task
Force has since continued to pursue community consensus on
constitutional
reform within the limits set by the NPC decision to introduce orderly
progress
in time for the 2007 and 2008 elections. In March 2005, Tung Chee-hwa
for
health reasons announced his resignation as Chief Executive to assume a
Vice-Chairmanship
of the National People's Consultative Conference. In keeping with the
Basic
Law, Chief Secretary Donald Tsang became Acting Chief Executive pending
election of a new Chief Executive within six months of the resignation.
A special
election scheduled for July 10, 2005 was preempted by the unopposed
sole candidacy
of Donald Tsang as CE for the two years remaining in Tung’s unfinished
term.
China is not opposed to democracy in Hong Kong or any other
part of the country or anywhere else in the world. China practices
socialist
democracy. In fact, as part of its
political reform, China has been experimenting with local elections as
the
village level. The Basic Law stipulates
that Hong Kong, as a Special Administrative Region (SAR), shall be
granted the
right by the Central Government to practice capitalism and to keep its
previous
ways of life and system of governance unchanged for 50 years. Article 45 of the Basic Law, Hong Kong’s mini
constitution, stipulates that “the method for selecting the Chief
Executive
shall be specified in the light of the actual situation in the Hong
Kong
Special Administrative Region and in accordance with the principle of
gradual
and orderly progress. The ultimate aim is the selection of the Chief
Executive
by universal suffrage upon nomination by a broadly representative
nominating
committee in accordance with democratic procedures.”
The operative words are: “actual situation in
Hong Kong”, “gradual and orderly progress” and “ultimate aim”.
The actual situation in Hong
Kong is that democracy
agitators have not yet proved themselves as the loyal opposition, nor
do they
seem to be interested in gradual and orderly progress. They reject the
idea of
ultimate aim tied to affirmative actual situations of national unity by
insisting on a fixed timetable for universal suffrage to politically
exploit
residual anti-China venom that continue to exercise an infectious hold
on the local
electorate. Such venom manifests itself
in the personal popularity and political influence of the
quintessential
colonial running-dog, the former Chief secretary Anson Chan who
continues to
take her orders dutifully from London.
China, along with many other countries, is opposed to US
policy of geographic extension of its version of democracy around the
world as
a cover for its expansionist strategy to consolidate US global
dominance. The
US is free to choose the political system it wants, but it does not
enjoy any
god-given right to export its national political preference beyond its
borders.
Besides, the US has yet to live up to its own political ideals after
more than
two centuries of evolutionary history. The US version of democracy
criminalized
the Communist Party of the USA throughout much of the Cold War. Even
though the
15th Amendment in 1870 gave former slaves the right to vote and
protected the
voting rights of adult males of all races, it took 87 years for the
Civil
Rights Act of 1957 to be passed as the first law to provide legal
protection of
such rights. Still, African Americans were not fully franchised
politically until
the Civil Rights Act of 1964. President John F. Kennedy in his
televised speech
on June 11, 1963 said: “We preach freedom around the world, and we mean
it. And
we cherish our freedom here at home. But are we to say to the world -
and much
more importantly to each other - that this is the land of the free,
except for
the Negroes; that we have no second-class citizens, except Negroes;
that we have
no class or caste system, no ghettos, no master race, except with
respect to
Negroes.”
Even in the US, which
considers itself as the self-proclaimed beacon of democracy, universal
suffrage
took more than a century to become fact. Many conservative political
analysts
consider gradualism as the key strength of the US political system. Yet the self-styled democrats in Hong Kong,
never having agitated for democracy under 154 years of British colonial
rule, repeatedly
staged, with US urging and assistance, street demonstrations in Hong
Kong to demand
universal suffrage by the fourth election cycle after the return of the
colony
to Chinese sovereignty. It is by every standard an extremist and
disingenuous demand.
When the US Constitution was written in 1790, only white male
property owners (less than 16% of the nation’s population) had the
vote. It
took two centuries for the term "government by the people" to become
reality.
The last religious prerequisite for voting was eliminated only in 1810,
thirty
years after the Constitution established the separation of church and
state. Property ownership and tax
requirements were
not eliminated until 1850, six decades after. The 15th Amendment,
rectified in
1870, protects the voting rights of adult male citizens of any race.
Yet
Chinese Americans did not enjoyed citizenship rights and could not vote
until 1943;
Asian Indian Americans not until 1946 and Japanese and other Asian
Americans
not until 1952. African Americans had been allowed to vote since the
passage of
the 14th Amendment in 1868, three years after the end of the Civil War
that
ended slavery, by both houses on June 8 and the June 13, 1866. The
Amendment
was designed to grant citizenship to and protect the civil liberties of
recently freed slaves. It did this by prohibiting states from denying
or
abridging the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United
States,
depriving any person of his life, liberty, or property without due
process of
law, or denying to any person within their jurisdiction the equal
protection of
the laws. Most Southern states refused to ratify the 14th Amendment.
The result
was the 1867 Reconstruction Act that divided the South into five
military
districts controlled by martial law, proclaimed universal manhood
suffrage and
required the new state constitutions to be drawn up and the Amendment
was
finally rectified in 1868 by the legislatures of 28 of the 37 States.
It was a
case of justified suspension of popular liberty to enforce moral
liberty. The
hold-out states rectified the Amendment only decades later: Maryland on
April
4, 1959 (after having rejected it on March 23, 1867); California on May
6, 1959
and Kentucky on March 18, 1976 (after having rejected it on January 8,
1867). Since
1866, however, every Southern state had found ways such as poll tax and
literacy requirements to keep African Americans away from the voting
booths. In
the Southern states up until 1964, fewer than 40% of African American
adults
were registered to vote. In Mississippi, which stood dead last, the
figure
dropped to 6.4%. After the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee
(SNCC)
exposed Mississippi racism to national attention in the early 1960s and
with Northern
liberals up in arms over news headlines of Southern institutional
racism,
President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Voting Rights Act of 1965. The
law
pledged the federal government to enforce equal access to the ballot in
the
South 189 years after the nation’s founding. Thus the gratuitous
pronouncements
by US government spokesmen of support for quick and early universal
suffrage in
Hong Kong were at best hypocritical, not to mention unwarranted
interference in
another nation’s internal affairs.
One hundred and thirty-nine years after the founding of a
democratic nation known as the United States with a Bill of Rights
(Amendments
1-10 of the Constitution), a bill for women suffrage was finally
brought before
the House of Representatives on January 12, 1915, but was defeated by
174 for
and 204 against. Again a bill was brought three years later before the
House on
January 10, 1918. On the evening before, President Wilson made a strong
and
widely published appeal to the House to pass the bill. It was passed
with one
more vote than was needed to make the necessary two-thirds majority.
The fight
was then carried into the Senate. Again, President Wilson made an
appeal, and
on September 30, 1918 the question was put to the vote, but two votes
were
lacking to make the two-thirds majority. On February 10, 1919, it was
again
voted upon and lost by only one vote. By then there was considerable
anxiety
among politicians of both parties to have the amendment passed and made
effective before the general elections of 1920, so the President called
a
special session of Congress, and a bill introducing the amendment was
brought
before the House again. On May 21, 1919, it was passed by 42 votes more
than
necessary. On June 4, 1919, it was brought before the Senate, and after
a long
discussion it was passed with 56 ayes and 25 nays. It only remained
then that
the necessary number of States should ratify the action of Congress.
Within a
few days, Illinois, Wisconsin and Michigan, the legislatures of which
being then
in session, passed the ratifications. Other States then followed, with
Tennessee
being the last of the needed 36 States to ratify in the summer of 1920.
The
19th Amendment to the Constitution became an accomplished fact and the
Presidential
election of November 1920 became the first occasion on which women in
all of
America were allowed to exercise their right of suffrage. Unlike the
extremist
intransigence of the Hong Kong pan-democrats, no opposition vote
against women
suffrage justified its opposition by arguing that the bill did not go
far
enough to grant all other equal rights for women instead of mere voting
rights.
In politics, insistence on ultimate objectives is not an operative
rationale to
vote against incremental progress. The
pan-democrats
in Hong Kong did not just blocked the government’s sensible proposal,
their
spoiler anti-government minority opposition votes defeated majority
support for
progress on incremental political reform for Hong Kong.
The insistence of the Hong Kong pan-democrats to achieve
universal suffrage from 154 years of colonial rule in one convenient
step is an
extremist position of confrontational intransigence. Chief Executive
Tsang’s
November 30 pre-vote television appeal text reads: “Our proposed
constitutional
development package is a democratic package. It can enable Hong
Kong to
take a big step forward along the road to universal suffrage. It
significantly enhances the democratic element of the method for
selecting the
Chief Executive (CE) by doubling the size of the Election Committee
from 800 to
1600. All the 400 District Council members directly elected by
more than
three million registered voters will be included in the Election
Committee.
For the 2008 LegCo, the number of seats will increase by 10. Five
will be
returned through direct elections in the geographical constituencies.
The
other five will be elected from among the District Councillors, and
will
likewise have an electorate base of three million voters …. there are different views in Hong Kong about
the pace of achieving universal suffrage. While some consider
that the
current pace of constitutional development as proposed in the package
is not
quick enough and would want to have universal suffrage for the CE and
LegCo
elections as soon as possible, others are concerned that by moving too
fast we
may undermine the merits of the current system which would impact
negatively on
balanced participation. Our proposed package might not be all
things to
all people, but I believe that, after a long period of public
consultation, it
has given due regard to the aspirations of different sectors of the
community.
The proposed package has not come easily. So tonight, I
personally
appeal to you all: do not let the hard work and efforts of the past two
years
be wasted. I really cannot see any other option that can better
suit Hong
Kong’s current circumstances, and be acceptable to all interested
parties.
We are now facing a real danger of our democratic development
coming to a
halt. Some people insist that the Government should propose a
timetable
for universal suffrage right now; otherwise, they will not support our
reform
package. Their stance puzzles me. Why should there be a
conflict
between supporting the Government proposals — which advance democracy
in Hong
Kong — and wanting a roadmap and timetable for universal suffrage?
How
can the demands for a roadmap and timetable be served by rejecting the
Government proposals? What good will this do to democratic
development in
Hong Kong? Will this approach benefit the people of Hong Kong?
Indeed, is this the wish of Hong Kong people? Various
opinion polls
indicate that most Hong Kong people support our proposals. More
importantly, a majority of Hong Kong people feel that the electoral
arrangements for 2007 and 2008 should be handled separately from the
issue of a
timetable for universal suffrage. This underlines the pragmatism
of Hong
Kong people, who believe that constitutional development should not be
hamstrung by the debate over a timetable for universal suffrage.
They
think we should pass the constitutional development package first so
that we
can move towards universal suffrage from 2007 and 2008. ….
However, if the package were unfortunately
voted down by LegCo, then constitutional development for 2007 and 2008
would
come to a halt. If this happens, how can we realistically expect
to reach
a consensus on proposals for the CE and LegCo elections in 2012 and
secure the
necessary support from two-thirds of the legislators? Would
rejecting our
reform package bring us closer to our goal, or make it more distant? There is no practical difference between us.
The only difference is whether or not a timetable for universal
suffrage
should be linked to the proposals for the 2007 and 2008 elections. Fellow citizens, promoting democratic
development is the common wish of the SAR Government and the Hong Kong
people.
It is also the established policy of the Central Government.
Let us
work together to push forward our constitutional development with a
pragmatic
attitude. Let’s not miss this opportunity before us. If we choose
to mark
time rather than stride ahead we will be further away from our goal of
universal suffrage, not closer to it.”
Unlike
President Wilson, Chief Executive Tsang’s appeal for reason and unity
fell on
deaf ears among those whose grandstanding for democracy in Hong Kong
revealed
itself as merely a camouflage for anti-China confrontation.
The question is not whether Hong Kong should move from
colonialism toward democracy. The question is what kind of democracy
and at
what pace democratic reform should be implemented. On
November 15, 1992, then Deputy Prime
Minister Zhu Rongji remarked during a London visit that the proposals
by Chris
Patten, British Hong Kong’s last colonial governor, to introduce
unprecedented “democracy”
in the colony violated the 1984 Joint Declaration on the return of Hong
Kong to
China and had caused many Chinese people to wonder whether the
agreement should
"go with the wind." The rhetorical remark was widely misinterpreted
in the British colony in its twilight to signal that China might react
to
British violation of her commitment of “50 years without change” by
abandoning
the "one country, two systems" model set out in the document. The
Hong Kong stock market plunged and talk that China was considering
taking the
colony back before 1997 quickly spread into near panic. The overseas
edition of
the November 20 People's Daily quoted Madame Liu Yiu-chu, delegate from
Hong
Kong to the National People’s Congress and member of the Basic Law
Drafting
Committee, as reproaching foreign news organizations for distorting the
meaning
of the Deputy Prime Minister’s rhetorical remark. Unlike
Britain, China would not alter its policy
commitment to the principle of OCTS, even in reaction to British
violations. (Liu
Yiu-chu was this writer’s late sister and a well-known Hong Kong
political figure
whose vocal criticism had not always spared misguided Chinese policies.
She
died in March 1997.)
Hong Kong legislator James Tien, politically ambitious scion
of a local commercial tycoon family and chairman of the Liberal Party
that
represents foreign and local business interests, recently was reported
to have said
publicly that too much democracy in Hong Kong leads to a "free lunch
syndrome" in which the have-nots use elected institutions to claw back
wealth from the haves. Even with such despicably undemocratic attitude,
Tien
nevertheless is considered an ally of convenience by the pan-democrats,
for the
liberals and the pan-democrats are unnatural bedfellows in their common
aim to
weaken the hand of government for their separate purposes. The Liberal
Party leaders
know that a harassed government under siege from political pressure
would be
forced to ease regulatory control of the market to gain support from
business.
Tien as chairman of the pro-business Liberal Party committed
political treachery by abruptly withdrawing his party’s earlier promise
of legislative
support from the government’s proposal to implement Article 23 of the
Basic Law
“to enact laws on its own to prohibit any act of treason, secession,
sedition,
subversion against the Central People's Government, or theft of state
secrets,
to prohibit foreign political organizations or bodies from conducting
political
activities in the Region, and to prohibit political organizations or
bodies of
the Region from establishing ties with foreign political organizations
or
bodies.” The Liberal Party opposed the
new security law on the ground that it might inhibit foreign
investment. The security
proposal issue was seized upon by anti-China forces to galvanize
diverse public
discontent over economic problems to spark a massive street
demonstration on
July 1, 2003, the sixth anniversary of the return of Hong Kong to
Chinese
sovereignty. The New York Times in a
front-page report on the demonstration acknowledged: “Parts of the
pending
security legislation are less draconian than British colonial
regulations still
on the books for offenses like sedition.” Yet overwhelming misreporting
in the Western
media gave the impression that “people power” scored a “victory” in
forcing the
Hong Kong government to postpone a vote in Legco on the proposed
security law.
Even the Washington Post had to acknowledge that the Chief Executive’s
hand had
not been forced by “people power”, but by the unanticipated resignation
of a
key member of Exco, James Tien, chairman of the Liberal Party, leaving
the unprepared
government with insufficient two-thirds votes in Legco to enact the law
as
scheduled. Tien’s behavior was a classic
example of last-minute political treachery, a cardinal sin in politics
even for
democracies. If he had done what he did under a British colonial
governor, he
would have lost his party chairman post before he had a chance to
resign and
would have been branded a political and social pariah within 24 hours
by the
all-powerful British governor/dictator. All business firms in Hong Kong
knew
that opposition to British colonial government policy would put their
commercial prospect in immediate and serious jeopardy. After
Tung’s health-related resignation, Tien
tried to marshal support for himself to run against Donald Tsang for
Chief
Executive. Despite a lot of hot air about altruistic preservation of
electoral
integrity, the trial balloon failed embarrassingly to lift off.
Local polls on popular concerns repeatedly show “democracy” and “civil
liberty”
trailing by wide margins key livelihood issues such as rising
unemployment,
small-business bankruptcies, home-mortgage default, declining home
values that
produce negative equity, education reform, rising crime, and
deteriorating public
health. The street demonstration of July 1, 2003 had been organized by
the
Civil Human Rights Front (CHRF), a group of non-governmental
organizations
(NGOs) opposed to the government’s decision to enact new security laws
under Article
23. The make-up of CHRF was indiscriminately diverse, ranging from a
feminist
group that calls itself Queer Sisters; an NGO called Zi Teng that
promotes the
interests and rights of female and male "sex workers"; and the then
590-member
elitist polity that called itself the Democratic Party, to other
foreign-directed
groups such as the Justice and Peace Commission of the Hong Kong
Catholic
diocese; Amnesty International Hong Kong Section; and Human Rights in
China
Hong Kong Office.
The July 1, 2003 street demonstration of half a million was mislabeled
by the Western media as a political mass action. Yet politics is the
art of the
possible; and political actions must have realizable objectives within
constitutional limits. As long as democracy in Hong Kong is used as a
synonym
for anti-communist and anti-China institutions, there will be no
democracy,
since no government can be expected to welcome its own demise from mob
rule
manipulated by hostile foreign forces. The same rationale that the US
employed
to criminalize the Communist Party of the USA can be employed by China
to
criminalize the Democratic Party in Hong Kong. If the people in Hong
Kong truly
desire democracy, they must demonstrate that their democracy is a
patriotic
democracy, not a bogus Western democracy with which to perpetuate
neo-colonialism. The so-called democracy advocates won a meaningless
battle to
please their foreign handlers, but they are losing the war of making
Hong Kong
more free and democratic. They have given democracy a bad name in Hong
Kong as
a bogus slogan of anti-China foreign intrigue. As a result, there will
be less
democracy in Hong Kong, and a harsher final version of the security law
will be
justified by these seditious events, particularly if future
demonstrations
should turn violent, as threatened by some misguided and overzealous
organizers. In the other corner, the government now will soon realize
that for
democracy to work, it must succumb to an age-old necessary evil of
political
patronage to build a dominant government party along the path of the
PAP of
Singapore or the LDP of Japan or even the US democratic process of
money
translating into political power in ward politics. A politically
neutral and benign
government preserving social order and taking care of business is being
dismantled in the process by those blindly demanding bogus democracy
with naive
street demonstrators shouting slogans and waving candles for the
international
media.
The word “democracy” cannot be found in the text of either
the Sino-British Declaration or the Basic Law, the two official
documents defining
the political setting of Hong Kong under Chinese sovereignty for 50
years
starting July1, 1997. Before that date, the British ruthlessly imposed
imperialistic ruled over Hong Kong unapologetically as a colony without
any democracy
or human rights for 154 years. Agitation
for democracy and national liberation was a political crime throughout
that era
until the signing on December 19, 1984 of the Sino-British Joint
Declaration on
the return of Hong Kong to China in 1997. From
1984 on, despite the Joint Declaration’s
open pronouncement to keep
Hong Kong unchanged for 50 years, the departing British deviously
promoted
bogus democracy in Hong Kong as a new label for neo-imperialism. Overnight, colonialism is transformed by
British propaganda as a blessed regime based on freedom of speech, rule
of law
and free markets, in sharp contrast to historical facts.
The departing British had 15 years to set
Hong Kong up as a political time bomb for China, by disguising
colonialism, the
most evil of political institutions, into a haven of bogus democracy
and sham
freedom, and by presenting a colonial command bubble economy as a faked
model
of free-market fundamentalism. Hong Kong as a British colony was born
of an
unequal treaty of national shame, governed with blatant racial
discrimination,
inequality before the law for the colonial subjects, and strict trade
protectionism in favor of Britain. Under British rule, the economy of
Hong Kong
hardly flourished beyond illicit opium trade, overshadowed by a booming
Shanghai under the Republic of China after the 1911 Revolution, until
Shanghai’s
boom was interrupted by Japanese invasion in 1937.
From 1937 to 1941, Hong Kong profited from
British geopolitical machination to protect British interests in Asia
by exploiting
an expansionist Japan to neutralize a communist USSR in a continuation
of
British strategy in the Great Game against Tsarist Russia. After World War II, Hong Kong prospered from
US Cold War embargo of China and from provision of logistic support for
US
forces in the Korea and Vietnam wars. The opening of China in 1973 gave
Hong
Kong the basis for its current prosperity. Democracy
did not have much to do with Hong
Kong’s economic success in
the past, nor will it in the future.
Self-proclaimed latter-day democrats in Hong Kong can now comfort
themselves by claiming they are serving freedom and anti-communism
rather than
imperialism and colonialism. They now pose as heroes of democracy to
cover up
their shameful past as running-dogs of colonialism.
Extremism in the quest for instant democracy
is causing political gradualism to be stillborn in Hong Kong. The confrontation between the pan-democratic
forces and the government is shaping up not as a struggle to enhance
democracy,
but as a power struggle that readily sacrifices democratic progress to
prevent
it from ever rising from the ashes of colonialism.
Regarding the legislative defeat of HKSAR government’s
proposal based on consultation with the public on methods for selecting
the
chief executive in 2007 and forming the Legislative Council in 2008,
President Hu
Jintao said that “the HKSAR government’s package for constitutional
development
was in conformity with the Basic Law and relevant explanations and
resolutions
of the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress (NPC), that
it had
won wide support from the public, and was a plan that further promotes
democracy.” Hong Kong CE Donald Tsang
also said publicly there would be no chance for a second reform package
proposal
before the 2007-2008 elections, since the vetoed proposal, which had
been accepted
by the Central Government in Beijing, and blocked by the minority
pan-democracy
camp in the Legislative Council, fell short of the necessary two-thirds
vote of
40 out of 60. The reform package was voted down because out of 60 votes
in
Legco, 24 pan-democrats insisted on a timetable for universal suffrage,
which the
NPC, exercising its due authority in accordance with the Basic Law, had
previously
already ruled out.
The Basic Law stipulates that there would be a period of "50 years
without
change" after China resumed sovereignty in 1997. It is hard to argue
that
the introduction of democracy in Hong Kong would not represent a
significant
change in the governance of Hong Kong. Either 50 years without change,
or it is
open season for change on all levels, including the abandonment of the
colonial
legal system or market system. And it is dangerously naive on the part
of some
in Hong Kong to think that the "one country, two systems" policy can
be manipulated into an opening to topple the leadership of the Chinese
Communist Party.
Narcissistic Hong Kong would do well to note that public opinion in the
rest of
China on the unwarranted superiority complex in a Westernized Hong Kong
is far
from positive. The wealth in Hong Kong came from what the British could
not
haul off to Britain of what they had robbed from China through the
colony’s compradore
role during the age of Western imperialism and even now by other
foreign
interests under neo-imperialism, which explains why the wealth in Hong
Kong is
concentrated in real estate. Now that Hong Kong is trapped by its
dysfunctional
economic structure and its fixation on the mythical merits of
neo-liberal
market fundamentalism, it demands help and special privileges from
China while
it continues to proclaim its residual colonial system superior. Biting
the hand
that feeds one would only lead one to starvation. What
the Hong Kong government needs to do is
to step up an intense public education campaign to promote a better
sense of
national pride in a population that had been subjected to a century and
a half
of colonial mental conditioning, not just in schools for the young, but
broad-based adult education for the general public. Without a pervasive
sense
of national pride among the people, democracy cannot serve the national
purpose. Even government-funded radio and television in Hong Kong
routinely
ridicule Chinese leaders under the guise of freedom of speech in a
hostile and
disrespectful manner totally unacceptable to Chinese cultural decorum
toward
high office. Such open hostility to the US leadership is seldom seen in
programs run by the Voice of America. If Hong Kong would only spend on
educating the public on the importance of national pride a fraction of
what it
spends overseas to polish its image as a free market economy, Hong Kong
will
profit enormously from much needed social harmony and stability. The US
spends
more in Hong Kong to promote American values than the Hong Kong
government does
locally to promote pride in national dignity.
Some will no doubt erroneously interpret the legislative
defeat of the government’s package of gradual political reforms as an
inspiring
victory for Hong Kong’s pan-democracy forces. But it represents only a
defeat
for democracy. The reform package would have doubled the size of the
appointed
committee that selects Hong Kong's chief executive and enlarged its
legislature
to broaden representational government. Minority democrats were able to
block
the reform package only because it required a two-thirds majority for
approval
and they hold more than a third of the seats in the legislature. The
fact that
the majority supported the government’s proposal was academic in the
face of
minority rule.
Local columnist Michael DeGolyer wrote in the Standard
disputing pro-democracy legislators’ claim that they saw no gains from
passing
the government’s reform package and no losses if they voted it down.
The Hong
Kong Transition Project survey in November 2004 showed that 42% would
blame
pro-democracy parties a great deal or some, while the DAB, pro-business
groups
and the Liberal Party had 66% giving them very little blame to none. In
terms
of dissatisfaction, only three parties scored worse in November than
before the
2004 Legco election: the Democratic Party, the Frontier, and Article 45
Concern
Group, all which oppose the reforms because they see no gain or loss
for them.
According to DeGolyer, that is not what the numbers say.
Still, the pan-democrats exhibited little
concern for gains or losses for Hong Kong beside their own narrow
political
fate.
Deluded by a Pyrrhic victory, the pan-democrats are now planning
to further pressure China to violate the Basic Law to allow full
suffrage by
2012. They plan to make street demonstrations a recurring scene for
Hong Kong. They
plan to continue to resort to extremist tactics, the political
equivalent of
suicide-bombing terrorism, substituting the rule of constitutional law
with
rule by street demonstration to make unconstitutional demands for
destabilizing
political change. The pan-democrats are exercising dictatorship of a
disloyal
minority, with spoiler tactic, to implement winner-loses-all vetoes in
the
legislature, not to achieve what is good for the community but to
demonstrate
the obstructionist power of their partisanship. The
separate political aims of the
pan-democracy forces are trapped into
discipline political solidarity by the extremist dictate of a
Vatican-controlled
fanatic religious cleric delirious with grandiose political delusions.
Its
sheer hypocrisy for the Catholic Church to demand democracy as it is by
far the
most undemocratic institution in history. A
disloyal opposition politician controlled by
hostile foreign interests,
in the person of barrister Martin Lee, an elitist Queen’s Counsel who
has
transformed himself overnight into the vicar of democracy in
post-colonial Hong
Kong, who regularly makes duty report to his masters overseas,
personifies the
bogus democracy neo-imperialism has in mind for Hong Kong. Lee will
assume the
position of party whip for the pan-democracy forces on account of his
command
of foreign support. Anson Chan, the former top civil servant who
cunningly
camouflaged British imperialist oppression as humane benevolence, now
poses shamelessly
as “the Conscience of Hong Kong” while ever so obediently docile when
she equally
shamelessly and dutifully served British colonialism as the darling of
the last
British governor, went through a sudden political metamorphosis to join
the
latest street demonstration to demand for universal suffrage by 2012.
These are
the leaders of the so-called pan-democrats, a motley crew that resemble
the
unprincipled sales force of decrepit political used cars. The
Conscience of
Hong Kong indeed.
From 1982 onward, the propaganda machine of neo-imperialism
has been running full-throttle in painting colonial Hong Kong as a
fantasy
model of capitalistic democracy and rule of law. An instant
"democracy" movement has been fraudulently nurtured in Hong Kong with
open US support and guidance. The so-called Democratic Party was led by
the
nose by one Ellen Bork, deputy director of the Project for the New
American
Century (PNAC), a US neo-conservative group with an ultra-hawkish
hostile posture
toward communist China. In 2002, the US National Democracy Institute
(NDI),
chaired by former US Secretary of State Madeleine K. Albright,
self-appointed
enlarger of democracy around the world, established a field office in
Hong Kong
to “provide technical assistance to Hong Kong political parties,
political
groups, and civil society organizations seeking to increase their
ability to
increase citizen participation in the HKSAR's political life.” By its own description, NDI efforts have “both
reflected the moral values and served the strategic interests of the
United
States”; not the interests of Hong Kong or China or any other country
in which
it operates. Christine Chung is NDI's resident country director for
China. Based in Hong Kong, Ms. Chung has
designed
and implemented the Institute’s rule of law and governance reform
initiatives
in China including legislative and administrative hearings, political
party
reform, transparency in governance, and citizen participation in urban
community development and environmental governance “to serve US
strategic
interests.” In Hong Kong, she has worked with political party leaders,
civic
representatives and other democratic activists to encourage citizen
participation in political life, all “to serve US strategic interests.” People’s Daily ran an editorial entitled:
“Democracy is Not Coca-Cola,” criticizing what it called US attempts to
impose
democracy by the gun. “Democracy is a slow process based on the actual
conditions of various countries, it is not like coca-cola that
[concentrates]
can be transported from the United States to various Middle East
countries and
turned into products by adding water to it." Neither
can it be done in Hong Kong.
As Chief Executive Donald Tsang delivered to central
government leaders his first duty report and on the legislative setback
to his electoral
reform proposals, he continues to receive the full support of the
Central
Government in Beijing. Chief Executive Tsang was granted an hour-long
meeting by
President Hu Jintao and another by Premier Wen Jiabao the next day at
Zhongnanhai,
the central leaders’ headquarters in Beijing. Tsang publicly admitted
he
underestimated the confrontational intransigence of the pan-democrats,
implying
that the problem of how to deal with the obstinate opposition democrats
in the future
will be reconsidered. Appeasement of the
disloyal opposition cannot work because the targets of appeasement know
that their
political leverage is tied to their continued opposition. China’s record of behavior in Hong Kong has
consistently reinforced the belief that opponents are accorded more
respect and
consideration by the Central Government than supporters.
It is no secret that the patriotic left has
been largely marginalized in Hong Kong since the signing of the
Sino-British
Joint Declaration in 1984. Until this
strategy is changed, China will unwitting always invite unnecessary
opposition
to its policies in Hong Kong. Hong Kong
politics can benefit from the existence of a democratic party, but its
members
need to be real democrats with national pride rather than lackeys for
hostile
foreign interests. Appeasing the current
crop of so-called pan-democrats will serve no useful purpose besides
generating
more political cynicism.
Article 159 states clearly: The power of amendment of this
[Basic] Law shall be vested in the National People's Congress. The
power to
propose bills for amendments to this Law shall be vested in the
Standing Committee
of the National People's Congress, the State Council and the Hong Kong
Special
Administrative Region. Amendment bills from the Hong Kong Special
Administrative Region shall be submitted to the National People's
Congress by
the delegation of the Region to the National People's Congress after
obtaining
the consent of two-thirds of the deputies of the Region to the National
People's Congress, two-thirds of all the members of the Legislative
Council of
the Region, and the Chief Executive of the Region. Before a bill for
amendment
to this Law is put on the agenda of the National People's Congress, the
Committee for the Basic Law of the Hong Kong Special Administrative
Region
shall study it and submit its views. No amendment to this Law shall
contravene
the established basic policies of the People's Republic of China
regarding Hong
Kong.”
Annex I : Method for the Selection of the Chief Executive of
the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, Section 7 states: “If
there is a
need to amend the method for selecting the Chief Executives for the
terms
subsequent to the year 2007, such amendments must be made with the
endorsement
of a two-thirds majority of all the members of the Legislative Council
and the
consent of the Chief Executive, and they shall be reported to the
Standing
Committee of the National People's Congress for approval.” The
operative words
are: “If there is a need…” The recent
categorical rejection of the government’s electoral reform proposal by
the
pan-democrats in the Legislative Council indicates that there is no
need to
amend the method for selecting the CE until a demonstrated change in
the
“actual conditions” surfaces.
Similarly, Annex III. Method for the formation of the
Legislative Council and its voting procedures subsequent to the year
2007
states: “With regard to the method for forming the Legislative Council
of the
Hong Kong Special Administrative Region and its procedures for voting
on bills
and motions after 2007, if there is a need to amend the provisions of
this
Annex, such amendments must be made with the endorsement of a
two-thirds
majority of all the members of the Council and the consent of the Chief
Executive, and they shall be reported to the Standing Committee of the
National
People's Congress for the record.” The
intransigence of the pan-democrats shows that there is now no need to
amend the
provisions of Annex III because no constructive progress can be
expected from
further futile effort on the part of the government.
The government’s reform package would have broadened the
base of electors for the next chief executive in 2007 and the
Legislative
Council in 2008. The package failed to win the required two-thirds of
the
council’s 60 votes because of the obstructionist tactic of the
pan-democrats as
a voting block. Pro-democracy legislators opposed the reforms because
they did
not go far enough fro their taste, and demanded a timetable for
universal
suffrage, a demand that was clearly unconstitutional. Subsequently,
Chief
Executive Tsang said his government would not offer a revised reform
package,
and would focus on economic issues rather than constitutional
development for
the remainder of his term. As the New
Year arrives, local media in reviewing the past year are reporting that
many in
Hong Kong are wishing for continuing economic recovery and a decrease
in political
street demonstrations. In his New Year message, President Hu Jintao
pledged
that the central government will firmly safeguard the long-term
prosperity and
stability of Hong Kong and Macao. “We will adhere to the policies
of ‘one
country, two systems’, ‘Hong Kong people governing Hong Kong’, ‘Macao
people
governing Macao’ and a high degree of autonomy,” he said, adding that
the
central authorities will support the governments and chief executives
of Hong Kong
and Macao to administer by law and expand the exchanges and cooperation
between
the mainland and the two special administrative regions.
Thus the whole democracy controversy of 2005 in Hong Kong was
just a tempest in an empty tea cup.
Written on January 2,
2006
This article was refused publication by Asia Times on Line
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