China urged U.S. to drop double standard, deliberates on draft to improve electoral system of the HKSAR

Chinese lawmakers began deliberating a draft decision on improving the electoral system of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR) on Friday at the fourth session of the 13th National People’s Congress (NPC).
The United States called China’s moves to change
the Hong Kong electoral system a direct attack on its autonomy and democratic
processes. China had repeatedly urged Washington to stop meddling with China’s
internal affairs, and said the rioting and turbulence in HK last year reveals
there are clear loopholes and deficiencies in the current electoral system.
China urged the U.S. to drop its double
standard. Following the U.S. Capitol Hill riots in January, China’s Foreign
Ministry spokesperson Hua Chunying questioned why the U.S. said HK’s riot is a
“beautiful sight to behold” but condemned the Capitol Hill storming as riots
and an “attack on democracy.”
Wang Chen, Vice Chairman of the Standing
Committee of The National People’s Congress published the following statement
Friday.
"Some foreign countries and external
forces, by way of their own legislative bills or administrative means and
through their consular agencies and NGOs in the Hong Kong SAR and other
channels, blatantly meddled with Hong Kong affairs. They also grossly imposed
so-called “sanctions” on the relevant Chinese personnel and flagrantly
emboldened and covered those anti-China, destabilizing forces in Hong Kong.
These activities seriously jeopardized the constitutional order and the order
of rule of law in the Hong Kong SAR. They posed a grave challenge to the authority
of the Constitution, the Basic Law and the Law of the People’s Republic of
China on Safeguarding National Security in the Hong Kong SAR. Such activities
put China’s national sovereignty, security and development interests into
serious jeopardy and severely disrupted social stability of the Hong Kong SAR.
They must be resolutely opposed, and forceful measures must be taken to prevent
and defuse risks arising therefrom."