Selasa, 08 Desember 2020

Mt Everest grows by nearly a metre to new height - BBC News

Mt Everest stands behind Mt Nuptse as seen from the Nepal side
Getty Images

The world's highest mountain Mount Everest is 0.86m higher than had been previously officially calculated, Nepal and China have jointly announced.

Until now the countries differed over whether to add the snow cap on top. The new height is 8,848.86m (29,032 ft).

China's previous official measurement of 8,844.43m had put the mountain four metres lower than Nepal's.

Everest stands on the border between China and Nepal and mountaineers climb it from both sides.

Officials at Nepal's foreign ministry and department of survey said surveyors from both countries had co-ordinated to agree on the new height.

The agreement to jointly announce the new measurement of the Earth's highest point was made during Chinese President Xi Jinping's visit to the Nepalese capital, Kathmandu last year.

Why the difference over official height?

Chinese authorities had said previously Mount Everest should be measured to its rock height, while Nepalese authorities argued the snow on top of the summit should be included.

BBC infographic
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The Chinese surveyors had calculated their figure after they measured the mountain in 2005.

Nepal's government officials told the BBC in 2012 that they were under pressure from China to accept the Chinese height and therefore they had decided to go for a fresh measurement to "set the record straight once and for all".

The 8,848m height Nepal had been using for Mount Everest was determined by the Survey of India in 1954, but for the first time the country has now conducted its own measurement of the summit.

Four Nepalese land surveyors spent two years training for the mission, before heading to the summit.

Members of Chinese surveying team pose for photos at Everest Base Camp on May 10, 2020 in Shigatse, Tibet Autonomous Region of China.
Getty Images

"Before this, we had never done the measurement ourselves," Damodar Dhakal, spokesman at Nepal's department of survey, told the BBC.

"Now that we have a young, technical team [who could also go to the Everest summit], we could do it on our own," Mr Dhakal said.

Nepal's lead surveyor Khimlal Gautam lost his toe due to frostbite while on the summit to install height-measuring equipment last year.

"For summiteers, scaling the highest peak means a great accomplishment. For us, it was just the beginning," Mr Gautam had told BBC Nepali after his return.

"Unlike other surveys of the Everest in the past, we chose 03:00 to minimize errors that could have been caused because of sunlight in the day time."

Why else has the height been questioned?

Some geologists have suggested a major earthquake in 2015 may have had an impact on Mount Everest's height. The 7.8 magnitude earthquake killed nearly 9,000 people in Nepal, and caused an avalanche which buried parts of the base camp at the mountain. At least 18 climbers were killed.

Nepali survey team check the equipments in Kathmandu before leaving on an expedition to re-measure the height of Everest
Getty Images

Some geologists said the earthquake may have caused Everest's snow cap to shrink.

Scientists had found that some other Himalayan peaks such as Langtang Himal, mostly to the north of Kathmandu and close to the epicentre, had reduced in height by approximately a metre after the earthquake.

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  • How deadly is Mount Everest?
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  • Seven things you didn't know about Everest

Others have argued that Mount Everest, like other Himalayan peaks, may have actually grown over time because of the shifting tectonic plates it sits on. But experts say major earthquakes can result in that process being reversed.

"The 2015 earthquake is also a major reason why we re-measured the mountain," said Mr Dhakal.

How was Mount Everest re-measured?

The heights of mountains are measured with the mean sea level as the base. So it's less about working out the where the top is, than where the bottom would be.

Nepal used the Bay of Bengal as its sea level, but India had already surveyed a point closer to Everest, near the India-Nepal border, from the bay, and was able to provide the Nepalese surveyors with the height at that point.

From there, Nepal built a network of line-of-sight stations stretching nearly 250km (155 miles) to the point Everest first become visible, creating a chain of points it could measure and add together.

The Chinese surveyors, according to the state-run China Daily, used the Yellow Sea in the eastern province of Shandong as their sea-level base.

Mount Everest as seen from the Chinese side
Getty Images

Surveyors from both sides also used trigonometry formulas to calculate the height of the summit. The formulas they used calculate the height of a triangle by multiplying its base with its angles.

But for all the clever ground work, someone still needs to be on top of the mountain. The Nepalese surveyors went up to the summit last year, while the Chinese surveyors went up in May, becoming the only team to reach the top in 2020, after Nepal suspended all expeditions during the coronavirus pandemic and China banned foreign travellers.

Nepalese officials said they used 12 different lower peaks looking up at the Everest summit for their trigonometry calculations, to achieve a more precise result. Chinese media reported that Chinese surveyors used the same method.

"Once the surveyor's beacon had been placed on the summit, surveyors at stations around the summit measured the distance from the six points to the beacon, which meant at least six triangles could be calculated to determine the mountain's height," Jiang Tao, associate researcher at the Chinese academy of surveying and mapping, told the state-run China Daily.

Both sides also used Global Navigation Satellite Systems to receive elevation data from numerous receivers in their calculations.

Locals in Lantang valley try to rebuild their villages after the earthquake buried it with avalanche and rockfalls killing hundreds of people
Getty Images

China has previously conducted two height measurements of Mount Everest - first in 1975 and then in 2005.

Members of the second survey team installed a Chinese version of a GPS device on the summit, according to the Himalayan Database.

This time the Chinese surveyors used China's BeiDou navigation satellite system, which is believed to be a rival to the US-owned Global Positioning System, or GPS.

"Using the system, snow depth, weather and wind speed would also be measured to help glacier monitoring and for ecological protection," China's state news agency Xinhua reported.

Nepalese surveyors used GPS to make their calculations.

"We processed this data using internationally accepted methodology to determine the height of Mount Everest," Mr Dhakal told the BBC.

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2020-12-08 10:11:00Z
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Joe Biden picks ex-General Lloyd Austin as defence secretary - Al Jazeera English

US media report that Austin, who played a major role in the 2003 invasion of Iraq, will be named first Black defence secretary.

US President-elect Joe Biden has chosen Lloyd Austin, who helped spearhead the US invasion of Iraq in 2003 and rose to head the US Central Command, as the first Black defence secretary, US media reported.

A veteran of conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan, the retired four-star army general, 67, beat out the favourite for the job, former under-secretary of defence Michele Flournoy, amid pressure on Biden to nominate more minorities for positions in his cabinet.

Flournoy would have been the first woman to serve as defence secretary.

Biden had also considered Jeh Johnson, a former Pentagon general counsel and former secretary of homeland defence.

As a career military officer, Austin is likely to face opposition from some in Congress and in the defence establishment who believe in drawing a clear line between civilian and military leadership of the Pentagon.

Although many previous defence secretaries have served briefly in the military, only two – George C Marshall and James Mattis – have been career officers. Marshall also served as secretary of state.

Like Mattis, Austin would need to obtain a congressional waiver to serve as defence secretary.

Congress intended civilian control of the military when it created the position of secretary of defence in 1947 and prohibited a recently retired military officer from holding the position.

General Lloyd Austin III listens to questions during a media briefing on Operation Inherent Resolve, the international military effort against ISIL (ISIS), at the Pentagon in Washingon, DC [File: Paul J. Richards/AFP]
Austin graduated from the US Military Academy at West Point in 1975 and served 41 years in uniform.

Biden has known Austin at least since the general’s years leading US and coalition troops in Iraq while Biden was vice president.

Austin was commander in Baghdad of the Multinational Corps-Iraq in 2008 when Barack Obama was elected president, and he returned to lead US troops from 2010 through 2011.

Austin also served in 2012 as the first Black vice chief of staff of the army. A year later he assumed command of US Central Command, where he fashioned and began implementing a US military strategy for rolling back ISIL (ISIS) fighters in Iraq and Syria.

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2020-12-08 08:04:12Z
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Lloyd Austin: Biden picks ex-general as defence secretary - BBC News

Gen Lloyd Austin. File photo
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US President-elect Joe Biden has chosen retired General Lloyd Austin as his defence secretary, US media report.

If approved, the 67-year-old who retired in 2016 would become the first African-American to lead the Pentagon.

He would need a congressional waiver as seven years are required between active duty and becoming military chief.

Mr Biden has been facing calls including from Democratic Asian, Black and Latino caucuses to nominate minorities to senior cabinet posts.

Veteran Pentagon official Michèle Flournoy, who would have been the first woman to hold the position, had also been considered a front-runner - as well as Jeh Johnson, a former Pentagon general counsel and former secretary of homeland security.

  • What Biden's new foreign policy team tells us

Four-star Gen Austin served under the Obama administration, leading the US Central Command, whose area of responsibility includes the Middle East, Central Asia and part of South Asia, between 2013 and 2016. He was the main military architect of the US-led offensive against the Islamic State group in Iraq and Syria.

Before that he was vice-chief of staff of the Army and the last commanding general of the US forces in Iraq. During these years he worked closely with Mr Biden, who was vice-president in the Barack Obama administration.

Gen Austin has a reputation for strong leadership and for avoiding the public eye, giving few interviews and opting to not speak publicly about military operations.

Joe Biden (left) and Gen Lloyd Austin in Iraq in 2011
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Gen Austin had once been viewed as a long-shot candidate but in recent days emerged as a top-tier contender and a safe choice, Politico reported citing three people familiar with the situation.

But the nomination could draw criticism from some progressive groups over Gen Austin's position in recent years as a member of the board of directors of defence contractor Raytheon and opposition from lawmakers in Congress who favour a clear civilian control of the Pentagon.

The required congressional waiver has been granted only twice, most recently in the case of James Mattis, the retired Marine general who served as President Donald Trump's first defence secretary.

Mr Biden and Gen Austin have not commented. The president-elect offered and Gen Austin accepted the post on Sunday, reports said.

News of the nomination emerged ahead of a meeting between Mr Biden, Vice President-elect Kamala Harris and civil rights groups on Tuesday. Rev Al Sharpton, the civil rights activist, said the decision was "a step in the right direction but not the end of the walk".

The reported decision comes two weeks after Mr Biden announced other senior members of his national security team.

Mr Biden defeated Republican President Trump in the 3 November election. The president continues to refuse to accept defeat in the election, alleging, without evidence, there has been widespread fraud.

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2020-12-08 07:55:00Z
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Mysterious illness causes ‘public panic’ in Indian district as hundreds hospitalised - Daily Express

Andhra Pradesh: Hundreds fall sick from ‘mysterious disease’

So far, at least 450 people have been hospitalised and hundreds more affected by the illness. Covid-19 has been ruled out, and West Godavari district collector Revu Muthyala Raju said yesterday there was no sign of contagiousness up until that point, the Times of India reports.

Symptoms include fainting, seizures, and nausea. At least one person – a 45-year-old man – died of a heart attack following onset of the symptoms, according to reports.

Water contamination was being investigated as a possible cause, with authorities probing 20 water supplies in and around the city of Eluru, where the outbreak was first reported, Reuters said yesterday afternoon.

However, state health minister Alla Kali Krishna Srinivas claimed water contamination has been ruled out as a cause of the disease spread.

N Chandrababu Naidu

Andhra Pradesh politician N Chandrababu Naidu has called for an impartial investigation (Image: Hindustan Times / SIPA USA / PA Images)

Indeed, the chief minister’s office claims people not linked to the municipal water supply have also fallen ill, AP news agency said.

Patients are reported to have tested negative for Covid-19 or viral infections such as dengue and herpes.

A district surveillance officer, Dolla Joshi Roy, said yesterday that 200 people have been discharged from hospital.

READ: 

Covid test India

Andhra Pradesh has already been hit hard by the Covid-19 pandemic (Image: Noah Seelam / AFP / Getty)

He said at the time investigators did not know how the illness was spreading, but that it is “very localised”.

He added: “We tested everyone for Covid-19 and that came back negative, so we know it is not that.”

The Times of India adds various tests have “almost established” that organochlorine substances could be playing a part in the illness.

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Boy washing hands

Researchers have investigated whether water is the cause of the illness. Pictured: A boy washes his hands in Secunderabad (Image: Noah Seelam / AFP / Getty)

These compounds are used in agriculture as pesticides including as a mosquito repellent.

The state government of Andhra Pradesh has said: “The causes of the outbreak are not known yet.”

Additionally, India’s federal health ministry said yesterday the illness has affected over 300 children.

It stated: “The children reported suffered from dizziness, fainting spells, headache, and vomiting.”

A central team is due to visit Andhra Pradesh today and publish a report by Tuesday evening local time.

Sputnik news reports the government is seeking to communicate with the public to manage “panic”.

The illness has sparked anger from the opposition Telugu Desam Party, which called for an inquiry into the incident.

Eluru on Google Maps

Hundreds of cases are localised to the town of Eluru (Image: Google)

An official from the party, N Chandrababu Naidu, said on Twitter on Sunday: “I demand an impartial, full-fledged inquiry into the incident.

“Floods, cyclone, or healthcare, the YSRCP Govt has been caught napping in emergency situations.”

The mystery illness has hit one of the worst-affected areas in India by the Covid-19 pandemic.

Over 800,000 cases have been detected there, reportedly leaving the healthcare system in a fragile state.

India as a whole has reported around 9,700,000 positive cases of Covid-19, with at least 140,958 deaths.

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2020-12-08 05:47:00Z
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Senin, 07 Desember 2020

NZ's prime minister, police and security services apologise after report into Christchurch terror attacks - Sky News

New Zealand's police chief has joined the country's prime minister and security services in apologising to those affected by the Christchurch terror attacks, saying: "We could have done more".

The words come on the publication of an 800-page Royal Commission report, which looked into whether the atrocity on 15 March last year could have been prevented.

Forty-four recommendations were made in the report and, although the commission said the attack could not have been prevented, it detailed failings by police and the NZ Security Intelligence Service (NZSIS), earmarking the need for major change.

Brenton Tarrant, charged for murder in relation to the mosque attacks, is seen in the dock during his appearance in the Christchurch District Court, New Zealand March 16, 2019
Image: Brenton Tarrant is serving a life sentence without parole for the attacks

Commissioner of Police Andrew Coster apologised to those affected by the shootings, saying: "We could have done more. We unreservedly apologise.

"The only information that could or should have alerted police and other agencies to the attack was the email sent by the terrorist to parliament just eight minutes before the attack."

Brenton Tarrant is serving life in prison without parole - the toughest penalty imposed in New Zealand's judicial history - for the murders of 51 people and attempted murder of 40 others at two city mosques.

The report said Tarrant, an Australian, had devoted his life to planning the attack soon after his arrival in New Zealand in August 2017.

More from New Zealand

It said he had displayed racist behaviour from a young age, becoming radicalised with extreme right-wing views about those he deemed a threat. But he was also described as someone who avoided social situations, had no close friends, and who behaved in a way that did not attract suspicion.

Tarrant was granted a firearms licence within three months of his arrival in New Zealand but the report said the licensing process failed to meet standards, with the regulation of semi-automatic weapons described as lax, open to exploitation and gamed by him.

He had named two referees, a "friend" he played online games with, despite having only been in his company for 21 days in a decade of gaming; and the friend's parent, who had only seen him for seven days over four years.

CHRISTCHURCH, NEW ZEALAND - JULY 13: General view as gun owners hand in their firearms at Riccarton Racecourse on July 13, 2019 in Christchurch, New Zealand. It is the first firearms collection event to be held in New Zealand following changes to gun laws, providing firearms owners the initial opportunity of many to hand-in prohibited firearms for buy-back and amnesty
Image: After the attacks and resulting legislation, there were firearms collections points set up across the country

The report said the NZSIS had an inappropriate focus on the threat of Islamic extremist terrorism, but that was not why Tarrant slipped under the radar.

"There was no way he could have been detected except by chance," it said.

Rebecca Kitteridge, director general of the NZSIS, apologised to Muslim organisations that felt targeted and monitored by the security agency.

"That was not and is not the case, NZSIS should have done better at explaining our role to the community and listening to their concerns. I know a number of people have found this upsetting and to them I apologise."

Some 1,168 submissions were received by those compiling the report, with many survivors saying they still do not feel safe at prayer and in their everyday lives.

The government said it accepted the report's findings and agreed in principle to the 44 recommendations, appointing a minister to coordinate the government response and implement changes.

Jacinda Ardern waves as she leaves the vigil and prayers
Image: New Zealand's prime minister Jacinda Ardern encouraged New Zealanders to show unity after the attacks

New Zealand's prime minister Jacinda Ardern said: "The commission made no findings that these issues would have stopped the attack. But these were both failings nonetheless and for that I apologise."

Ms Ardern said: "Going forward, we need to ensure an adequate focus of resources on the range of threats New Zealand faces and enhance our security and intelligence, and social cohesion work.

"An apology would be hollow without action."

Other changes announced by the government include establishing a Ministry for Ethnic Communities, a programme for frontline police to manage hate crime, amending the Terrorism Suppression Act to strengthen counter-terrorism legislation and creating a police-led early intervention programme for those showing early signs of radicalisation.

50 people were killed, and dozens were injured in Christchurch shootings
Image: Two mosques were attacked by Tarrant in the South Island city of Christchurch

The report also revealed that Tarrant had accidentally fired his gun on 13 July 2018, leaving a bullet hole in the ceiling of his flat. He injured his right eye and thigh, resulting in him needing treatment at Dunedin Hospital's emergency department. Tarrant told them a round of ammunition exploded while he was cleaning a rifle barrel.

Metal fragments were removed from his eye and he was sent for x-rays of his leg, but no one, including hospital staff or his landlord, reported the incident to police. The commission recommended that health officials be required to report firearms injuries to police.

Other findings include the establishment of a new national intelligence security agency, and six recommendations to overhaul and improve New Zealand's firearms licensing system.

The report also warned New Zealanders against complacency, saying the country would "never be immune from violent extremism and terrorism".

"Even with the best systems in the world, a determined would-be terrorist could carry out an attack. But there is much the government can do, starting with a greater transparency and openness with New Zealanders."

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2020-12-08 02:03:45Z
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NZ's prime minister, police and security services apologise after report into Christchurch terror attacks - Sky News

New Zealand's police chief has joined the country's prime minister and security services in apologising to those affected by the Christchurch terror attacks, saying: "We could have done more".

The words come on the publication of an 800-page Royal Commission report, which looked into whether the atrocity on 15 March last year could have been prevented.

Forty-four recommendations were made in the report and, although the commission said the attack could not have been prevented, it detailed failings by police and the NZ Security Intelligence Service (NZSIS), earmarking the need for major change.

Brenton Tarrant, charged for murder in relation to the mosque attacks, is seen in the dock during his appearance in the Christchurch District Court, New Zealand March 16, 2019
Image: Brenton Tarrant is serving a life sentence without parole for the attacks

Commissioner of Police Andrew Coster apologised to those affected by the shootings, saying: "We could have done more. We unreservedly apologise.

"The only information that could or should have alerted police and other agencies to the attack was the email sent by the terrorist to parliament just eight minutes before the attack."

Terrorist Brenton Tarrant is serving life in prison without parole - the toughest penalty imposed in New Zealand's judicial history - for the murders of 51 people and attempted murder of 40 others at two city mosques.

The report said Tarrant, an Australian, had devoted his life to planning the attack soon after his arrival in New Zealand in August 2017.

More from New Zealand

It said he had displayed racist behaviour from a young age, becoming radicalised with extreme right-wing views about those he deemed a threat. But he was also described as someone who avoided social situations, had no close friends, and who behaved in a way that did not attract suspicion.

Tarrant was granted a firearms licence within three months of his arrival in New Zealand but the report said the licensing process failed to meet standards, with the regulation of semi-automatic weapons described as lax, open to exploitation and gamed by him.

He had named two referees: a "friend" he played online games with, despite having only been in his company for 21 days in a decade of gaming; and the friend's parent, who had only seen him for seven days over four years.

CHRISTCHURCH, NEW ZEALAND - JULY 13: General view as gun owners hand in their firearms at Riccarton Racecourse on July 13, 2019 in Christchurch, New Zealand. It is the first firearms collection event to be held in New Zealand following changes to gun laws, providing firearms owners the initial opportunity of many to hand-in prohibited firearms for buy-back and amnesty
Image: After the attacks and resulting legislation, there were firearms collections points set up across the country

The report said the NZSIS had an inappropriate focus on the threat of Islamic extremist terrorism, but that was not why Tarrant slipped under the radar.

"There was no way he could have been detected except by chance," it said.

Rebecca Kitteridge, director general of the NZSIS, apologised to Muslim organisations that felt targeted and monitored by the security agency.

"That was not and is not the case, NZSIS should have done better at explaining our role to the community and listening to their concerns. I know a number of people have found this upsetting and to them I apologise."

Some 1,168 submissions were received by those compiling the report, with many survivors saying they still do not feel safe at prayer and in their everyday lives.

The government said it accepted the report's findings and agreed in principle to the 44 recommendations, appointing a minister to coordinate the government response and implement changes.

Jacinda Ardern waves as she leaves the vigil and prayers
Image: New Zealand's prime minister Jacinda Ardern encouraged New Zealanders to show unity after the attacks

New Zealand's prime minister Jacinda Ardern said: "The commission made no findings that these issues would have stopped the attack. But these were both failings nonetheless and for that I apologise."

Ms Ardern said: "Going forward, we need to ensure an adequate focus of resources on the range of threats New Zealand faces and enhance our security and intelligence, and social cohesion work.

"An apology would be hollow without action."

Other changes announced by the government include, establishing a Ministry for Ethnic Communities, a programme for frontline police to manage hate crime, amending the Terrorism Suppression Act to strengthen counter-terrorism legislation and creating a police-led early intervention programme for those showing early signs of radicalisation.

50 people were killed, and dozens were injured in Christchurch shootings
Image: Two mosques were attacked by Tarrant in the South Island city of Christchurch

The report also revealed that Tarrant had accidentally fired his gun on 13 July 2018, leaving a bullet hole in the ceiling of his flat. He injured his right eye and thigh, resulting in him needing treatment at Dunedin Hospital's emergency department. Tarrant told them a round of ammunition exploded while he was cleaning a rifle barrel.

Metal fragments were removed from his eye and he was sent for x-rays of his leg, but no one, including hospital staff or his landlord, reported the incident to police. The commission recommended that health officials be required to report firearms injuries to police.

Other findings include the establishment of a new national intelligence security agency, and six recommendations to overhaul and improve New Zealand's firearms licensing system.

The report also warned New Zealanders against complacency, saying the country would "never be immune from violent extremism and terrorism".

"Even with the best systems in the world, a determined would-be terrorist could carry out an attack. But there is much the government can do, starting with a greater transparency and openness with New Zealanders."

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2020-12-08 01:41:15Z
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US puts sanctions on 14 Chinese officials over Hong Kong crackdown - Financial Times

Donald Trump’s administration has imposed sanctions on 14 high-level Chinese officials over allegations they have undermined democratic processes in Hong Kong.

The officials targeted for sanctions in Monday’s sweep are all high-ranking members of the rubber stamp National People’s Congress Standing Committee, the Chinese body that oversees the national legislature and was responsible for adopting and implementing the new national security law that paved the way for a crackdown in Hong Kong over the summer. 

“Beijing’s unrelenting assault against Hong Kong’s democratic processes has gutted its Legislative Council, rendering the body a rubber stamp devoid of meaningful opposition,” said Mike Pompeo, US secretary of state, in a statement announcing the measures on Monday.

Authorities in Hong Kong have stepped up their crackdown on opposition political figures and supporters of the 2019 anti-government protests since Beijing introduced a new national security law in the city in June, targeting terrorism, subversion, collusion and foreign interference.

Last week a trio of Hong Kong activists received jail sentences in connection with pro-democracy demonstrations during the summer.

Mr Pompeo said the NPCSC had “effectively neutered the ability of the people of Hong Kong to choose their elected representatives”, accusing Beijing of repeatedly using the national security law to “stifle dissent and arrest those who protest Beijing’s oppressive policies”. 

“Hong Kong is China’s Hong Kong,” China’s foreign ministry spokesperson Hua Chunying said on Monday before the sanctions were officially announced. “China urges the US side to immediately stop meddling in Hong Kong affairs, stop interfering in China’s internal affairs, and stop going further down on the wrong path.”

Under the Trump administration, relations between the US and China have deteriorated as the two have clashed over trade, espionage claims and coronavirus, among other issues.

The US national security and defence strategies pinpoint China as the country’s most significant threat to its global position.

Joe Biden, the US president-elect, has also promised a tough line against China and has previously described Chinese president Xi Jinping as “a thug”. The precise details of his approach remain unclear, however, and his team may seek potential areas to boost co-operation, including over climate change.

The US already imposed a round of sanctions on officials in China and Hong Kong over the new security law in August. These included targeting Carrie Lam, Hong Kong’s leader, who said in a television interview last month she had been forced to receive her salary in “piles of cash” because she has lost access to the banking system as a result of the measures.

The latest sanctions will subject the 14 individuals to asset freezes and visa restrictions that will also apply to immediate family members. 

While China is likely to be furious at what it sees as US interference in its domestic affairs, Bonnie Glaser, China expert at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, said there would nevertheless likely be some relief among business interests at the relatively narrow, personalised scope of the actions.

The Trump administration has so far declined to impose sanctions on financial institutions that would aim to cut them off from the US financial system, she noted.

“The banking system is likely relieved by this approach,” she said.


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2020-12-07 23:03:00Z
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