Perennial issue

“Sometimes things could be right under your nose. The only problem is your eyes are above it”.  Doesn’t this old quote fit  the turmoil for democratic space in next door  Hong Kong?

Local headlines rivet our attention on the Disbursement Acceleration Program (DAP). It’s the beginning  of the end for President Benigno Aquino’s regime, chortle critics. It is a bump in the road as rating firm Standard and Poor shrugs. The Philippines is on track to be the “next Asian miracle”, said visiting World Bank president Jim Yong Kim.

These viewpoints  smudge the fact that “the political future of Hong Kong hangs in the balance,” 17 years after Britain handed the colony to China, writes University of Hong Kong constitutional law  professor Michael Davis. Will a  free society emerge  as  Deng Xiaoping assured  in 1979? Or will  Beijing rule it  like  the restive  “autonomous regions” of   Tibet or Xinjiang?

Squeezed  in the middle are over 200,000 Filipinos. Many, often college graduates, work as domestics. New hires and rehires of Filipino  employees crested at 131,680 last year. Their home remittances, thru official channels, reached P1,806,890 ( US $420,207.00)

Half a  million took to Hong Kong streets early this month. They backed  an earlier informal  vote,  by 800,000 Hong Kongers,  to elect  the city’s next leader, New York Times reported  Such rights  were pledged by the 1984 Joint Declaration signed by Britain and China.

“A nearly solid river of protesters, most of them young, poured out of Victoria Park into the evening, heading for the skyscraper-lined canyons of downtown Hong Kong, Asia’s top financial center”. There, hundreds staged two sit-ins past dawn. Police arrested  511 people.

Today’s demonstrators are younger than previous Hong Kong protesters. They’re computer savvy. Also, they’re leery of mainstream news media and disinterested in legal compromises. “We use activism to pressure the politicians,” a student explained.

The protesters demand “civil nomination,” That’s the term for citizens should they be allowed to propose candidates who then get on the nominating committees’ list. No way, Beijing counters: It demands selections be  done under its eye. Beijing  will vet candidates based on their “patriotism,” That’s  shorthand for  loyalty to the  Communist Party.

This June,  Beijing issued “a white paper” that  claimed ultimate authority over Hong Kong. That triggered locals to protest against whittling down against the “high degree of autonomy” Hong Kong was promised in  1984.

Davis notes in his study  that  Beijing claims it can  interpret Hong Kong mini-constitution as it sees fit. The territory’s autonomy, the white paper claims, derives “solely from the authorization of the central leadership.”

Hit the rewind button:  Deng Xiaoping said in 1979  that the Basic Law  met commitments made in the Joint Declaration. Hong Kong courts were free to interpret  the Basic Law within  Hong Kong’s autonomy. Foreign   affairs, of course, remained within  Beijing’s exclusive domain. And  “universal suffrage” was to be implemented.

Not any more.  The white paper  now refers to Hong Kong’s judges as “administrators”. It  emphasizes their  primary  role is “guarding national security. This is the latest in the  erosion of  the  Deng Xiaoping pledge.

The National People’s Congress Standing Committee effectively overturned a 1999 decision by Hong Kong’s highest court  about local residency rights. So, what happened to Hong Kong’s “judicial independence?

Later, Beijing made it’s approval a requirement for any reforms to the Legislative Council election process. And over the past decade a  subservient Hong Kong government tried to ram  through unpopular national security laws and policies on “patriotic education” – often derailed by Hong Kong street protests.

Beijing  agreed in 2007,  to allow universal suffrage to elect the chief executive in 2017. But last year, it   insisted that candidates  must “love China and love Hong Kong”. That’s Orwellian doublespeak —to exclude the democrats. Thus, many locals “feel they have no other choice but to take the cause of democracy to the streets,” Davis adds.

Come August, rallies plan  to “shut down” central Hong Kong with  sit-ins  unless demands for universal suffrage are met. The “Occupy Central” group has  organized an online poll.

“Shut down” probably overstates the potential impact of Occupy Central’s demonstrations. Major international banks and accounting firms, for example, tango to Beijing’s line. The street demos will “disrupt the city’s economy and threaten the peace”, “Blue skies are not ahead for Hong Kong” states  a Reuters report.

Hong Kong Shanghai Banking Corporation  and other banks yanked  advertising from a newspaper critical of the mainland  government. Standard Chartered pulled the advertising plug from the same pro-democracy newspaper that HSBC did,  They cited “commercial considerations.”

Ernst & Young, Pricewaterhouse and Deloitte took out an ad warning.  Continued protests  could force “multinational companies and  investors” to move their regional center from Hong Kong. Now the bank is advising investors to sell stock in Hong Kong companies.

HSBC revised its  “Global Equity Insights Quarterly” that advised to sell  Hong Kong stocks. “We reduce Hong Kong to underweight on concerns about negative news flow,” on the demos. That was all analysts said in a report, which covers markets around the world.  Reactions compelled an  updated  revision — with some beefed up reasons for its downgrade:
Hong Kong’s streets will play out the perennial issue.
Freedom is good, but business is, well, business.

Read more...