Hong Kong is on the edge of a precipice. Late into Tuesday evening, protesters at several locations hurled Molotov cocktails at police who fired back volleys of tear gas. Since the weekend, a protester has been shot by police with a live round, and a man horrifically set alight after
Financial Times: Hong Kong authorities have lost their legitimacy
Having lost popular legitimacy, the authorities have resorted instead to police rule. In the absence of any political resolution, the police find themselves, invidiously, on the front lines, expected to govern what has become an ungovernable city through force. Since they only have one set of tools, an inevitable cycle of escalation has set in. The city no longer has a law and order problem, but a rule of law problem.
Now there are signs that Beijing is preparing to take an even harder line. Protesters fear further steps to erode the rights and freedoms Hong Kong has enjoyed since the end of British rule in 1997, which are guaranteed in the Basic Law that came into effect at the handover. Chinese officials have signalled a desire for legislative and education reforms in the city, including strengthening security legislation. An article of the Basic Law said Hong Kong should enact laws to prohibit "treason, secession, sedition [or] subversion" against the central government. But a move to implement that through a national security bill in 2003 was dropped after half a million people protested.
Any attempt to introduce a national security law now would be seen as a final straw by demonstrators. If Beijing intends to push through such legislation, the only way it might succeed could be by also enacting another unfulfilled article of the Basic Law — which set the "ultimate aim" of choosing Hong Kong's chief executive by universal suffrage. This has become the biggest of the demonstrators' five demands.
The chances appear slim indeed. Granting the universal suffrage demand would risk making Beijing appear cowed by violence, and setting a precedent for other parts of China. Yet, balanced with an eventual commitment to introduce a national security law in Hong Kong, it could in theory provide the framework for a visionary compromise. It might be the only route left to a peaceful end to the protests — and to averting the ever-increasing danger of a bloody military intervention from the mainland.
Written by: Nick Butler
© Financial Times