Hong Kong Watch urges UK to stand up for human rights during Chancellor’s visit to China
Today, Hong Kong Watch Patrons Lord Patten of Barnes, Lord Alton of Liverpool and Sir Geoffrey Nice KC sent a letter to UK Foreign Secretary David Lammy MP, raising their concerns over the Chancellor of the Exchequer’s visit to the People’s Republic of China (PRC) and its implications for the UK-China bilateral relationship.
The Chancellor of the Exchequer, Rachel Reeves MP, is visiting Beijing to meet with the PRC vice-premier, He Lifeng, and visiting Shanghai to meet with local officials and business representatives. The meeting is expected to mark the recommencement of the UK-China Economic and Financial Dialogue, which was last held in 2019 and suspended following the PRC’s imposition of the National Security Law in Hong Kong in 2020.
The Chancellor will be accompanied by Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey, Financial Chief Authority Chief Executive Nikhil Rathi, and senior banking figures including Chair of HSBC Sir Mark Edward Tucker, whose bank is withholding an estimated £978 million in Mandatory Provident Fund savings from BNO Hong Kongers now living in the UK.
The trip also comes before the completion of the government’s audit of UK-China relations by the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO). Originally planned to be released within the first 100 days of the new government taking office, the results of the China audit are now expected to be released in the first quarter of 2025.
Hong Kong Watch is concerned that major visits to China by senior officials are being planned before FCDO has completed its audit of UK-China relations, and while the Hong Kong government continues to engage in acts of transnational repression against British nationals and pro-democracy activists. Most recently on Christmas Eve 2024, the Hong Kong government issued a third round of arrest warrants with HK$1 million (£102,700) bounties for six exiled Hong Kongers, four of whom reside in the UK.
That is why our Patrons who signed the letter to the Foreign Secretary below “request information on which specific issues are raised during the Chancellor’s visit to China related to Hong Kong and human rights” and ask him “to seriously consider our concerns to demonstrate [his] commitment to the UK’s democratic values and human rights obligations under international law and the Sino-British Joint Declaration.”
You can find the full letter here.
Lord Alton, Hong Kong Watch Patron and Chair of the Human Rights Joint Committee, said:
“The FCDO promised that the China audit would set a clear and consistent direction for the UK’s China policy over the next five years. But with senior government officials already flying to Beijing, it would appear that the UK’s China policy is being made up as we go along.
Seeking opportunities for growth should not come at the expense of our commitments to democracy and human rights. We are seriously concerned that presently the former is being prioritised over the latter. We urge the Foreign Secretary to demonstrate that this government will stand up for human rights, and not simply pursue economic growth at any cost.”
香港監察贊助人聯署去信英外相 促請英國在財相訪華期間捍衛人權
今天,香港監察贊助人彭定康勳爵(Lord Patten of Barnes)、奧爾頓勳爵(Lord Alton of Liverpool)和御用大律師尼斯爵士(Sir Geoffrey Nice)去信英國外交大臣林德偉(David Lammy),就財政大臣李韻晴(Rachel Reeves)訪問中國及其對英中雙邊關係的潛在影響提出憂慮。
香港監察擔心,英國當局正安排高級官員在外交、聯邦及發展事務部完成審核英中關係前訪問中國,而香港政府則持續跨國鎮壓英國國民和社運人士。最近一次發生在2024年平安夜,香港政府公布第三輪通緝名單,懸紅100萬港元(102,700英鎊)通緝六名流亡港人,當中四人居於英國。
那就是為何聯署香港監察贊助人在致外相的信中「要求提供財相訪華期間所提出有關香港和人權具體議題的資訊」,並要求他「認真考慮我們的憂慮,從而表明秉乘英國的民主價值,以及國際法和《中英聯合聲明》下的人權義務。」
請在此處閱覽信件全文。
香港監察贊助人、英國國會人權聯合委員會主席奧爾頓勳爵表示:
「外交部承諾,今次對中國的審核會為英國未來五年的對華政策確立清晰而一致的方向。但有見政府高官紛紛飛去北京,英國對華政策似乎是隨事態發展而制訂的。
物色增長機會不應犧牲我們對民主和人權的承諾。我們非常擔心,現時前者先於後者。我們促請外相表明現屆政府會捍衛人權,而不是只顧不惜一切代價追求經濟增長。」