China threatens to retaliate over U.S. bill that could shutter Hong Kong trade offices

FAN Editor

An exterior view of the U.S. Capitol in Washington, DC on September 9, 2024. Members of the Senate and U.S. House of Representatives return to the Nation’s capitol, following their August recess.

Bonnie Cash | Getty Images News | Getty Images

American lawmakers have passed a bipartisan bill that could eventually lead to the shuttering of Hong Kong’s U.S.-based trade offices, drawing strong condemnation from the Chinese-ruled city and Beijing. 

The legislation, the Hong Kong Economic and Trade Office Certification (HKETO) Act, was passed by the U.S. House of Representatives with overwhelming support on Tuesday.  

If it passes the Senate and is signed into law, HKETO would require the U.S. secretary of state to annually review the “privileges, exemptions and immunities” granted to Hong Kong’s Economic and Trade Offices.

And if the secretary of state determines an office to no longer enjoy a “high degree of autonomy” from the Chinese government or to pose other concerns, such as those related to national security, it will be required to terminate operations. 

Beijing strongly condemned the act’s passing on Wednesday, accusing the U.S. of politicizing normal economic cooperation and attempting to contain Hong Kong’s development. 

“China urges the U.S. to stop advancing that act to prevent further damage to the stability and growth of China-US relations. Otherwise, China will take strong and resolute countermeasures,” a government spokesperson said.

The remarks echoed a statement from the Hong Kong government that decried the U.S. for twisting facts, violating international laws and norms, and grossly interfering in the affairs of Hong Kong. 

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Hong Kong has 14 Economic and Trade Offices overseas, which work to advance the finance center’s economic and trade interests, as well as support overseas enterprises in expanding their business in the city. 

However, proponents of HKETO have accused these offices of also operating as agents of the Hong Kong government and, by extension, Beijing. 

The accusations are representative of a breakdown in Washington and Hong Kong’s diplomatic relations since the passage of a Beijing-backed national security law in 2020, following crackdowns on pro-democracy protests and political dissent in the city.

In a hearing on Tuesday, the sponsor of HKETO, GOP Rep. Chris Smith, chair of the Congressional-Executive Commission on China, called the bill “a necessary next step in tangibly demonstrating our solidarity with the persecuted citizens of Hong Kong.”

“The United States should not be granting diplomatic privileges and immunities to a network of communist spies and propagandists,” he added. 

In March, the Hong Kong government implemented an additional security law, Article 23, which U.S. officials and analysts have argued could further erode Hong Kong’s autonomy and threaten U.S. businesses there.

The U.S. State Department said in a release last week that “businesses should be aware that the risks they face in the [People’s Republic of China] are now increasingly present in Hong Kong.”

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