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Hong Kong police warn residents to avoid red lines on politics

International Desk | banglanews24.com
Update: 2021-04-03 17:22:06
Hong Kong police warn residents to avoid red lines on politics [photo collected]

For Hong Kong residents wondering what sort of behaviour might breach the Beijing-imposed national security law, one of the city's top police officers says it is the wrong question to ask.

"Do not tempt the law - it's simple," Mr Oscar Kwok, the Hong Kong Police Force's deputy commissioner for management, said in an interview with Bloomberg Television.

"A healthy attitude is to say, 'How can I be a responsible citizen and just make sure that I contribute to the overall harmony and peace and security of this place', rather than say 'Hmm, let me see how far I can push this envelope, so that I can almost touch the red line, but you can't touch me'," Mr Kwok said. "This isn't how we want to police Hong Kong."

The security law, put into place after sometimes-violent pro-democracy protests that rocked the city in 2019, prohibits subversion, secession, terrorism and foreign collusion. But lawyers and Western governments have criticised the law's vague provisions as a tool for Hong Kong authorities to jail activists and opposition lawmakers for normal political activities, as well as students for posting comments online.

In a wide-ranging interview, Mr Kwok defended the Hong Kong Police Force, saying the arrests were necessary because the city faces pressing national security threats, including from the United States.

The Biden administration has tightened sanctions on mainland and Hong Kong officials on allegations that they undermined the former British colony's autonomy - as promised ahead of the 1997 handover.

Source: The Straits Times 

BDST: 1722 HRS, APR 03, 2021
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