Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said in a statement Wednesday that he has certified to Congress that Hong Kong is no longer autonomous from China and does not warrant special treatment under U.S. law.
Why it matters: Revoking Hong Kong’s special status would hasten its economic and financial decline, already set in motion by China’s growing political grip on the city. The preferential status that the U.S. has long granted Hong Kong has made the city a top U.S. trading partner.
The big picture: The Chinese Communist Party last week unveiled a sweeping new security law that will criminalize sedition, foreign influence and secession in Hong Kong. The move and the subsequent reaction from the U.S. have put the once semi-autonomous city’s status as one of Asia’s largest financial hubs at risk.
- The U.S. and Hong Kong do $67 billion in bilateral trade each year.
- More than 1,300 U.S. companies have operations in Hong Kong, and around 80,000 U.S. citizens currently reside in the city.
The backstory: Hong Kong has operated under its own legal system since the U.K. returned the colony to China in 1997. People and businesses there have lived and operated far more freely than would be possible in mainland China.
- An extradition bill that threatened to undermine Hong Kong’s autonomy sparked massive protests last year. The new measures from Beijing could go much further, and activists fear the crackdown will render Hong Kong just another Chinese province.
What to watch: White House national security adviser Robert O’Brien said on NBC’s “Meet the Press” on Sunday that if Pompeo is unable to certify Hong Kong’s autonomy, the U.S. will impose sanctions on China and Hong Kong.
What he’s saying:
Go deeper: Hong Kong’s economic future hangs in the balance
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