HK-mainland row
stinks of the CCP
By Paul Lin 林保華
Hong Kong has increasingly seen an influx of pregnant mainland Chinese women
giving birth in the territory to gain residency rights. This influx has made it
difficult for pregnant Hong Kong women to receive maternity assistance and has
raised tensions between Hong Kongers and mainlanders.
These tensions have triggered other incidents, such as arguments about mainland
Chinese tourists eating on the subway, claims that shopping sprees by mainland
Chinese tourists have set off inflation in the territory, luxury boutiques
discriminating against Hong Kongers and pandering to mainlanders, as well as
mainland Chinese academics teaching at Hong Kong universities fabricating
opinion polls for political purposes.
The situation took a turn for the worse when Peking University professor Kong
Qingdong (孔慶東) likened Hong Kongers to dogs. This raised the level of the
argument from the people on the street, to the social elite at some of the
highest institutions of learning. At the same time, the Liaison Office of the
Central People’s Government in Hong Kong and party mouthpieces named and
criticized Hong Kong academics that have not done as they were told. They also
branded people who thought of themselves more as “Hong Kongers” rather than
“Chinese” — based on a recent opinion poll — as “subversive,” raising the
argument to the political sphere.
Young Hong Kongers have hit the streets in protest, calling mainland tourists
“locusts” — leading to a standoff between “Hong Kong dogs” and “mainland
locusts.” In Chinese culture, dogs have little or no value, while in Western
cultures, they are treated as pets and man’s best friend. Locusts, however, are
viewed as harmful pests.
On Jan. 30, Taiwan’s Chinese-language United Daily News ran a ridiculous
editorial. It said that one of the things the Kong incident showed was that
“maybe the restrictions on expression in China are not as strict as observers
think.” In the writer’s view, the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) actually
tolerated “a professor spreading coarse ethnic and regional hatred, and stirring
up hostilities between people in Hong Kong, Taiwan and China.”
While criticizing Kong, the editorial did not forget to praise the CCP, which
led to the whole incident being misconstrued.
Compare Kong’s situation with what happened to Jiao Guobiao (焦國標), a former
professor of journalism at Peking University. In late 2003, Jiao wrote an
article about challenging the CCP’s Publicity Department and was kicked out of
the university as a result. So, why is it that Kong can sow seeds of ethnic and
regional hatred and be tolerated? The answer is simple: He has the support of
the CCP.
“Mixing in sand” is a major strategy used by the CCP to undermine its opponents.
As Hong Kong’s Basic Law allows non-resident pregnant women into the territory
to give birth, the number of pregnant mainlanders has already surpassed that of
pregnant Hong Kongers. And by obtaining residency through their newborns, they
have become an instrument for effecting a change in the population structure of
Hong Kong.
China allows these women to enjoy all the benefits of Hong Kong residents in
order to encourage more people to follow suit. That is the reason Beijing
ignores the public uproar and the Hong Kong government has not dared take any
decisive action on its own.
The CCP is happy to see this standoff between “dogs” and “locusts.” This is the
old Chinese strategy of setting foreign powers off against each other to weaken
them, which in the hands of the CCP is used to set different groups off against
each other. However, Hong Kongers must realize that these “locusts” were reared
by the CCP, which is the culprit behind it all.
In the same way, the CCP stands to gain the most from the domestic friction in
Taiwan caused by the independence-unification argument. The Democratic
Progressive Party has started equating the Republic of China with Taiwan as a
display of internal unity toward other nations. However, China insists on the
so-called “1992 consensus” and its “one China” principle, and uses the Chinese
Nationalist Party (KMT) to divide Taiwan and create ethnic and regional
conflict.
Ethnic conflict is bound to result wherever the CCP gets involved. Just as in
Tibet and Xinjiang, this is now happening in Hong Kong.
Paul Lin is a political commentator.
Translated by Drew Cameron
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