China promotes security officials to senior roles in Hong Kong

26 June, 2021
China promotes security officials to senior roles in Hong Kong
China on Friday (Jun 25) approved the promotion of Hong Kong's security secretary John Lee to chief secretary, while police chief Chris Tang will take Lee's position in what critics say will further tighten Beijing's security squeeze on the global financial hub.

The elevation of Lee, 63, a former police deputy commissioner, to chief secretary may be the first-time a security professional has taken on the quantity two position in the territory since Hong Kong's handover from British to Chinese rule in 1997.

Other former chief secretaries have had extensive monetary and social policy-making expertise.

"They experienced distinguished performance in the government over the years and possess confirmed leadership skills," LEADER Carrie Lam, Hong Kong's leader, said in a statement. "I am confident they are competent for his or her new posts and would rise to the challenges in serving the city."

Beijing's imposition of a sweeping national security law in Hong Kong in June 2020 has put China's freest city on an authoritarian trajectory, with mass arrests of democratic campaigners, curbs on public assemblies and free speech.

The reshuffle could further empower security officials, critics say, who've faithfully implemented Beijing's new security regimen to strengthen control and clamp down on freedoms in the former British colony after mass pro-democracy protests in 2019.

"The promotion of John Lee and Chris Tang completes the swift and total transformation of Hong Kong into a police state," said Samuel Chu of the Hong Kong Democracy Council.

Lam and Lee are anticipated to travel to Beijing for the Chinese Communist Party's centenary celebrations in a few days, local media reported.

Lee and Tang, 55, were among 11 Hong Kong and Chinese officials sanctioned by the US government last August for undermining Hong Kong’s autonomy and democratic processes after the enactment of the national security law.

Lam told reporters on Friday the changes would lay out a "good base" for a government transition next year when her current term ends.

Lee holds a degree from Charles Sturt University in Australia, and joined the Hong Kong Police in 1977, rising to become deputy commissioner, according to a government statement.

He played an integral role in trying to implement a contentious proposed extradition law in 2019 that divided Hong Kong society and triggered the mass protests. That legislation was eventually scrapped amid widespread public demands Lee to quit.

Known for his hawkish stance, Lee had spearheaded the city’s disciplinary forces, including the police, in the national security crackdown.

That clampdown has seen mass arrests of democratic activists and politicians, and a freeze on the assets of the pro-democracy Apple Daily newspaper on national security grounds that resulted in its abrupt closure this week.

Chinese and Hong Kong officials say the national security law has restored stability and order to Hong Kong, maintaining that rights and freedoms aren't absolute.

One source who spent some time working with Lee said he's resolute, earnest and efficient but, as a career officer, "doesn't have an all natural feel for the politics of an extremely polarised Hong Kong".
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