China will not budge on opposing interference of “any” type in the internal affairs of Hong Kong by “some Western countries,” an apparent reference to the governments in Washington and London, a Chinese envoy has warned.
Liu Xiaoming, Beijing’s ambassador to London, made the warning during a press conference held in the British capital on Monday.
Beijing “would like to tell those external forces that the Chinese government remains steadfast... to oppose any” meddling in Hong Kong.
“Some Western countries have publicly supported extreme violent offenders, the US House of representatives adopted the so-called Hong Kong Human Rights and Democracy Act to blatantly interfere in Hong Kong affairs, which are China’s internal affairs,” said Liu.
Hong Kong has been engulfed by mass protests since June. The public display of anger was initially set up over a controversial extradition bill.
The proposal was eventually shelved, but the protests have continued and taken on an increasingly violent form, with masked individuals vandalizing public and private property and attacking security forces and government buildings.
The anti-government demonstrators now want complete separation from mainland China.
Earlier in the day, police sought to dislodge several hundred protesters who occupied a university and had allegedly set fire to its main entrance.
The protesters have upgraded their arsenal from makeshift catapults and Molotov cocktails to bows and arrows taken from sports departments. They use them against riot police, who have resorted to tear gas and live rounds.
“The British government and the foreign affairs committee of the House of Commons published China-related reports making irresponsible remarks on Hong Kong. What is worse is that certain British politicians even planned to present (an) award to a chief propagandist for Hong Kong independence,” Liu said.
His comments came a few hours after a spokesman for British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said London was “seriously concerned by” what he called the escalation of violence in Hong Kong, stressing that the British government supports the “right to protest.”
The Chinese ambassador, in response, accused the protesters of trying to destabilize and paralyze Hong Kong to “seize power.” He said people in the city were “under black terror created by violent extremism with their life and property under severe threat.”
Beijing sees the United States and Britain, the former colonial power in Hong Kong, as the main provocateurs of the protesters through statements of support.
Hong Kong has been governed under a “one-country, two-system” model since the city was returned to China in 1997.
Video: China's second aircraft carrier sailed through the Taiwan Straits and headed to the South China Sea for testing and training. pic.twitter.com/jjWzwgjrXI
— Global Times (@globaltimesnews) November 18, 2019
Chinese aircraft carrier sails through Taiwan Strait
Separately on Monday, China’s navy confirmed that its first domestically-built aircraft carrier had sailed through the Taiwan Strait the day before.
However, it said the deployment was not directed at any “specific target” and was instead part of “equipment tests and routine training.”
Beijing claims full sovereignty over self-ruled Taiwan. Almost the entire international community recognizes that sovereignty under a policy known as “One China.” Washington agreed to the policy in 1979.
The island gears up for presidential elections in January. Taipei has already accused Beijing of intimidation around the upcoming elections.
A spokesman for the Chinese Navy has said the Sunday sail-by had nothing to do with the current tensions between Beijing and Taipei.