John Lee Slams 'baseless' Economist Editorial On HK

"); jQuery("#212 h3").html("

Related News Programmes

"); });

2022-01-12 HKT 12:56

Share this story

facebook

  • John Lee says no country would allow 'treasonists, traitors, foreign agents or other forms of non-patriots to take part in its political system'. File photo: AFP

    John Lee says no country would allow 'treasonists, traitors, foreign agents or other forms of non-patriots to take part in its political system'. File photo: AFP

Chief Secretary John Lee has accused the Economist of misleading its readers about the situation in Hong Kong, in his second letter admonishing an international news outlet in as many weeks.

In its January 8 edition, the London-based publication ran an editorial headlined: "Hong Kong’s new legislature is a mockery of democracy".

It condemned last month's Legislative Council poll as "rigged".

In his rebuttal, Lee called the editorial's claim a "serious but baseless accusation".

He said no country would allow "treasonists, traitors, foreign agents or other forms of non-patriots to take part in its political system".

Lee continued: "If anything was 'rigged' it was the deliberately distorted image of Hong Kong that has been manipulated from the dark side of one's personal internal bias".

The chief secretary added that the rights to free speech and to run for election are enshrined in the Basic Law.

The Economist editorial also criticised a white paper issued by Beijing after the poll, which said the Communist Party of China has championed people's democracy, and that this laid the groundwork for developing democracy in Hong Kong under One Country, Two Systems.

The publication called the white paper "the latest broadside in China’s campaign to redefine democracy and portray the party as its torchbearer and Western versions as a sham".

Lee wrote that no country has a monopoly on democracy, that there are different models of democracy, and that the success of any model lies in how effective it is in "enabling its people to prosper in their living".

Just over a week ago, Lee sent a letter to the Wall Street Journal, also accusing the paper of misleading readers about the situation in Hong Kong.

Last month, Secretary for Constitutional and Mainland Affairs Erick Tsang sent two letters to the Journal responding to editorials concerning the Legco elections.

RECENT NEWS

HashKey Lists On Hong Kong Exchange

HashKey listed on the Main Board of The Stock Exchange of Hong Kong Limited, becoming the first digital asset company t... Read more

North Korea Linked To Over Half Of 2025 Crypto Heist Losses

TRM has published new research showing that North Korea-linked actors were responsible for more than half of the US$2.7... Read more

South Korea Forms Task Force After Coupang Data Breach

The South Korean government announced on Thursday (19 December) that it will establish an interagency task force to add... Read more

Is Hong Kongs Default Life Insurance Choice A Wealth Drain?

Hong Kong is a city that takes financial security seriously, boasting one of the highest insurance penetration rates in... Read more

RedotPay Secures $107M Series B, Total Funding Hits $194M

RedotPay, a global stablecoin-based payment fintech, has closed a US$107 million Series B round, bringing its total cap... Read more

91% Of Hong Kong Merchants Lose Revenue To Payment Friction

Aspire has released its Hong Kong Ecommerce Pulse Check 2025, highlighting that while mid-sized ecommerce merchants rem... Read more