China derecognizes British National Overseas passport

China said Friday it will no longer recognize the British National Overseas passport as a valid travel document or form of identification amid a bitter feud with London over a plan to allow millions of Hong Kong residents a route to residency and eventual citizenship.
The announcement
by Foreign Ministry spokesperson Zhao Lijian on Friday throws up new
uncertainty around the plan just hours after the U.K. said it would begin
taking applications for what are called BNO visas beginning late Sunday.
Under the plan, as
many as 5.4 million Hong Kong residents could be eligible to live and work in
the U.K. for five years then apply for citizenship. Demand soared after Beijing
last year imposed a sweeping new national security law on the former British colony
following months of pro-democracy protests.
“The British side’s
attempt to turn a large number of Hong Kong people into second-class British citizens
has completely changed the nature of the two sides’ original understanding of
BNO,” Zhao told reporters at a daily briefing.
“This move
seriously infringes on China’s sovereignty, grossly interferes in Hong Kong
affairs and China’s internal affairs, and seriously violates international law
and the basic norms of international relations,” he said. “China will no longer
recognize the so-called BNO passport as a travel document and proof of identity
starting from Jan 31st, and reserves the right to take further measures.”
Many Hong Kongers
carry multiple passports and it is unclear what if anything the Chinese
government could do to prevent people entering the U.K. through the BNO visa
plan. As a further protection of personal privacy, a cellphone app will allow
applicants to download their biometric information without having to been seen
visiting the British visa office.
The BNO passport
was originally a disappointment for Hong Kongers when it was first offered
ahead of Hong Kong’s handover to Chinese rule in 1997. At the time, it offered
only the right to visit for six months with no right to work or become a full
citizen. Applicants had to have been born before the handover date.
However, pressure
grew to expand such privileges as China increasingly cracked down on civil and
political life in Hong Kong in what critics say violates China’s commitment to
maintain the city’s separate way of life for 50 years after the handover. China
first declared the 1984 Sino-British Declaration setting out the handover
arrangements null and void despite its recognition by the United Nations, then
imposed the national security law on the territory after the city’s legislature
was unable to pass it on its own.
“I am immensely
proud that we have brought in this new route for Hong Kong BNOs to live, work
and make their home in our country,” British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said
in a statement.
“In doing so we have honored our profound ties of history and friendship with the people of Hong Kong, and we have stood up for freedom and autonomy – values both the UK and Hong Kong hold dear.”