(AP) China’s military deployed fresh troops to Hong Kong
on Thursday in what it called a routine rotation amid speculation that
it might intervene in the city’s pro-democracy protests.
Video broadcast on China Central Television showed a long convoy of
armored personnel carriers and trucks crossing the border at night and
troops in formation disembarking from a ship. Earlier, scores of
soldiers ran in unison onto trucks, which the state broadcaster said
were bound for ports and entry points into Hong Kong. A handover
ceremony was held before dawn.
“This time the task has a glorious mission. The responsibility is
great. The job is difficult,” an unnamed major said to troops before
they departed. “The time for a true test has arrived!”
The official Xinhua News Agency said it was the 22nd rotation of the
People’s Liberation Army’s garrison in Hong Kong. The previous one was
in August 2018.
Nearly three months of fiery anti-government demonstrations have
sparked concerns that the military will be deployed in the
semi-autonomous Chinese city. The Hong Kong garrison earlier published a
promotional video with scenes of soldiers facing off with people
dressed like protesters.
Chinese Defense Ministry spokesman Ren Guoqiang told reporters in
Beijing on Thursday that the demonstrators must abide by Hong Kong’s
laws.
A leader of 2014 pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong said the city’s government is using the same tactics as five years ago.
“The government is just trying to threaten people with emergency law,
with the entrance of the People’s Liberation Army,” Yvonne Leung said
at a news conference.
A former British colony, Hong Kong was returned to China in 1997
under a “one country, two systems” framework, which promises the city
certain democratic rights that are not afforded to the mainland. In
recent years, however, some Hong Kong residents have accused Beijing of
steadily eroding their freedoms.
The newly arrived Chinese troops have been educated on Hong Kong’s
laws and vowed to defend the nation’s sovereignty, Xinhua said.
“We will firmly implement the guideline of ‘one country, two systems’
and the Basic Law and the Garrison Law of Hong Kong,” Liu Zhaohui, the
garrison’s deputy chief of staff, said on CCTV.
The Garrison Law allows the Hong Kong-stationed troops to help
maintain public order at the request of the city government. That has
never happened, and Hong Kong authorities have said they can handle the
situation themselves.
Troops stationed in Macao, another special administrative region, also completed a rotation Thursday.
The Xinhua report on the previous rotation in August 2018 did not mention “one country, two systems” or national sovereignty.
Source: Associated Press By Ken Moritsugu and Yanan Wang
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