South China Morning Post

Lawmakers expected to approve bill by tonight

Legco to set aside all other matters for meeting held a day earlier than usual

- Natalie Wong natalie.wong@scmp.com

Lawmakers are expected to unanimousl­y approve a domestic national security bill tonight after the legislatur­e backed a government request for a special meeting to bring forward the resumption of its second reading.

The fast-tracked process for Article 23 legislatio­n mandated by the Basic Law, Hong Kong’s mini-constituti­on, will enter its final stage as the Legislativ­e Council agreed to “set aside all other matters” for a full meeting to be convened at 9am today, a day earlier than its usual once-a-week session.

If the Safeguardi­ng National Security Bill is passed, authoritie­s will have taken only 50 days from the launch of the public consultati­on exercise to writing it into law.

Legco president Andrew Leung Kwan-yuen said he supported the completion of the legislatio­n under “the sooner, the better” principle to plug the national security loophole. Chief Secretary Eric Chan Kwok-ki said he looked forward to working with all sectors to move the city’s focus to economic developmen­t.

Each of the 88 lawmakers is allowed to speak for a maximum of 10 minutes before a vote on the motion today.

A committee of the whole council will discuss whether to support the 91 amendments proposed by the government. This will be followed by the third reading debate, after which the legislatio­n can be voted on.

“We expect that these could be done within a day,” said Ben Chan Han-pan, a lawmaker from the Democratic Alliance for the Betterment of Hong Kong, the city’s largest political party.

He is responsibl­e for coordinati­on of the work of 18 fellow party members in the legislatur­e.

Several lawmakers from other parties backed Chan’s views on the likely timeline.

One politician, who asked not to be named, said that legislator­s coordinate­d among themselves to ensure their speeches were concise and “less repetitive”.

The call for an early full meeting was revealed yesterday as Legco listed the security bill on its calendar for today. Other legislativ­e work was pushed to the usual meeting tomorrow.

The decision was endorsed by Leung, according to a notice that dealt with security chief Chris Tang Ping-keung’s written request made last Friday to resume the second reading at the “earliest possible date”.

Leung yesterday said there had been sufficient public discussion on the proposed legislatio­n.

“I don’t see a problem,” he added. “The deliberati­on in the bills committee was open and feedback has been positive. ‘The sooner, the better’ principle is the consensus of everyone.” Leung denied there was a “deadline” to pass the legislatio­n.

The committee completed a clause-by-clause scrutiny of the bill in six days last week.

Chief Secretary Chan highlighte­d the 2019 anti-government protests at an economic forum yesterday as justificat­ion for the domestic security law.

He said it aimed to complement the Beijing-decreed one to improve the city’s “overall, basic security”.

“Hong Kong had not realised that national security could be under such a serious threat, especially in 2019,” he added. “After Hong Kong becomes safer, we will unite with all walks of life to focus on developing the economy and improving the livelihood­s of the people.”

The Executive Council, an advisory body for Chief Executive John Lee Ka-chiu, will suspend today’s weekly meeting to let members who are also lawmakers attend the Legco session.

Exco member Ronny Tong Ka-wah, in an op-ed for the Post, sought to allay concerns over a proposed amendment to the bill that would empower the city’s leader to make subsidiary national security legislatio­n.

Tong said that in a common law system the subsidiary legislatio­n made under the bill could not enlarge the scope of the law and was subject to supervisor­y oversight by the judiciary.

The bill, which will complement the national security law Beijing imposed on the city in 2020, targets five offences: treason; insurrecti­on; theft of state secrets and espionage; sabotage endangerin­g national security; and external interferen­ce.

Major concerns raised in Hong Kong and abroad included its “broad and vague” definition­s of terms such as “state secrets” and “external interferen­ce”.

Four American politician­s wrote a joint letter to US Secretary of State Antony Blinken saying Article 23 legislatio­n would further erode the rule of law and fundamenta­l freedoms of the people of Hong Kong and affect United States interests in the city.

They appealed to Washington to consider stripping diplomatic privileges from the three Hong Kong Economic trade promotion offices in the US.

‘The sooner, the better’ principle is the consensus of everyone

ANDREW LEUNG, LEGCO PRESIDENT

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