China sanctions approved by US House as Pelosi calls Hong Kong security law 'horrific'
The US House of Representatives on Wednesday joined
the Senate in approving a bill to rebuke China over its crackdown in Hong Kong
by imposing sanctions on groups that undermine the city’s autonomy or restrict
its freedoms.
The bill targets police units that have cracked down
on Hong Kong protesters, as well as Chinese Communist party officials
responsible for imposing a strict “national security” law on Hong Kong, which
is considered a special administrative region within China and maintains its
own governing and economic systems.
The measure also would impose sanctions on banks
that do business with entities found to violate the law.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi called the unanimous
House vote “an urgently needed response to the cowardly Chinese government’s
passage of its so-called ‘national security’ law, which threatens the end of
the ‘one country, two systems’ promised exactly 23 years ago today.”
Pelosi, a fierce critic of Chinese human rights
violations, said: “All freedom-loving people must condemn this horrific law”
imposed by China, adding that it was specifically intended to “dismantle
democratic freedoms in Hong Kong”.
The House bill is similar to a measure approved last
week in the Senate, but makes some minor changes. Senator Chris Van Hollen, a
co-sponsor of the Senate bill, said senators will vote as soon as Thursday to
give final legislative approval, sending it to the White House.
Lawmakers from both parties have urged the Trump
administration to take strong action in response to the crackdown by China
against the former British territory, which was granted partial sovereignty
under a treaty that took effect on 1 July 1997.
China has said it will impose visa restrictions on
Americans it sees as interfering over Hong Kong.
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo denounced the threat
of a visa ban as a sign of “how Beijing refuses to take responsibility for its
own choices” and said adoption of the security law “destroys the territory’s
autonomy and one of China’s greatest achievements”.
Beijing’s “paranoia and fear of its own people’s
aspirations have led it to eviscerate the very foundation of the territory’s
success,” Pompeo said in a statement.




