News Feed

A 20 year old from Hong Kong with a £100,000 bounty on her head has accused “short-sighted” Labour of “sacrificing Britain’s democracy” over China’s proposed mega-embassy. Chloe Cheung has been named a "wanted person" by Hong Kong police, who issued a $HK1 million reward for information leading to her capture abroad.

In December, then aged 19, she became the youngest of 19 activists accused of breaching a national security law introduced by Beijing in response to huge pro-democracy protests in the former British colony five years ago. She added to the warning that Beijing's plans for a sprawling new embassy in London - near the capital’s financial district - could pose an espionage risk.

Writing in the Express, Chloe said: “The Labour Party describes its approach to China as “compete, cooperate, and challenge.” On paper, that sounds reasonable. But in practice, where is the “challenge"? Raising human rights concerns behind closed doors is not sufficient. “Take, for example, China’s proposal to build a mega-embassy in central London. This site would include over 200 residential units, giving diplomatic immunity to an unusually large number of staff. Intelligence officials, local residents, and activists have raised concerns that the embassy could be used as a surveillance hub. And yet, the proposal has been taken out of the hands of the local council and backed by government ministers."

Chloe, who now works with the Committee for Freedom in Hong Kong Foundation, said: “The embassy is emblematic of a short-sighted Labour government set on sacrificing Britain’s democracy and security for the promise of economic gain. This is not the Britain I recognise. If we truly want to uphold democracy, we cannot treat authoritarian regimes like China as partners.”

Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner this week gave China two weeks to explain why parts of its plans for the mega-embassy have been blanked out.

Several rooms on planning documents submitted to Tower Hamlets council, including the basement area, have been marked "redacted for security reasons".

Rayner, who is set to decide on the fate of the project early next month, has requested a response from Beijing by 20 August.

A spokesman for the Chinese Embassy in the UK said they had "taken into full consideration the UK's planning policy and guidance as well as views of all relevant parties" when they submitted the application.

"The Chinese Embassy in the UK is committed to promoting understanding and the friendship between the two peoples and the development of mutually beneficial cooperation between the two countries," the spokesman told the BBC.

He added: "Building the new embassy would help us better perform such responsibilities."

China bought the site of the proposed new embassy, at old Royal Mint Court near the Tower of London, for £255million in 2018.

At 20,000 square metres, the complex would be the biggest embassy in Europe if it goes ahead.

There are concerns that the site could allow China to infiltrate the UK's financial system by tapping into nearby fibre optic cables carrying sensitive data for firms in the City of London.

Pro-democracy campaigners from Hong Kong also fear Beijing could use the huge embassy to harass political opponents and even detain them.

And residents nearby also fear it would pose a security risk to them and attract large protests.

China's application to turn the site into a new embassy has previously been rejected by Tower Hamlets’ local council but Ms Rayner is now set to make the final decision by September 9 after taking control of the process last year.

Political ties with China deteriorated under former Conservative Prime Ministers Boris Johnson, Rishi Sunak and Liz Truss. The last UK prime minister to visit China was Theresa May, in 2018.

But the relationship changed last year when a closed-door meeting between Sir Keir and Chinese President Xi was held in Brazil in November.

Chancellor Rachel Reeves in January went on to co-chair the first UK-China economic summit since 2019, in Beijing.

Ms Reeves said re-engagement with China could boost the UK economy by £1billion, with agreements worth £600million to the UK over the next five years.

A joint statement from Foreign Secretary David Lammy and Home Secretary Yvette Cooper previously said: “The UK strongly opposes the National Security Law, which has eroded the rights and freedoms of Hong Kongers. We call on the Chinese and Hong Kong authorities to end the deliberate targeting of opposition voices in the UK and elsewhere.”

The Government insisted it takes the protection of Hong Kongers' rights, freedoms and safety very seriously.

It will not tolerate any attempts by China to coerce, intimidate, harass or harm their critics overseas.


Source link

Leave A Comment


Last Visited Articles:


Info Board

Visitor Counter
0
 

Todays visit

47 Articles 8868 RSS ARTS 15 Photos

Popular News

🚀 Welcome to our website! Stay updated with the latest news. 🎉

United States

216.73.216.248 :: Total visit:


Welcome 336.73.336.348 Click here to Register or login
Oslo time:2025-08-10 Whos is online (last 1 min): 
1 - United States - 206.70.206.248
2 - United States - 3.94.777.27
3 - United States - 3.889.88.66
4 - United States - 44.275.67.66
5 - United States - 18.232.11.247
6 - United States - 98.83.477.44
7 - United States - 74.209.700.30
8 - United States - 55.90.8.255
9 - United States - 68.266.648.239
10 - United States - 52.44.229.424
11 - United States - 42.74.244.494
12 - United States - 34.238.45.583
13 - United States - 52.2.4.273
14 - United States - 36.669.240.63
15 - United States - 52.22.64.232
16 - United States - 52.45.25.222
17 - United States - 30.233.209.055
18 - United States - 52.203.15.13


Farsi English Norsk RSS