Sen. Ben Sasse (R-Neb.) has announced a plan to introduce new legislation this week to automatically grant asylum to people in Hong Kong.
Last Thursday, China’s rubber-stamped legislature, the communist party’s National People’s Congress (NPC), adopted a national security law for Hong Kong that is to grant Beijing’s security apparatus the ability to operate in the Chinese-ruled city.
A day after the NPC’s decision, President Donald Trump announced decisions to curtail ties with Hong Kong, with plans to adopt measures such as revoking Hong Kong’s special trading status with the United States and imposing sanctions on Hong Kong and Chinese officials “directly or indirectly involved in eroding Hong Kong’s autonomy.”
“Victims of communism will always find refuge in the United States,” Sasse added. “The brave Hong Kongers who have stared down the threat of communist oppression will find safety here until their home is free.”
The press release does not outline what kind of documentation will be needed by Hongkongers to claim asylum in the United States.
Since the start of Hong Kong’s mass protests last June, Hong Kong police have arrested over 8,000 people. There have been many instances in which Hong Kong protesters and journalists were victims of police violence.
As of February, police have fired 16,191 tear gas rounds, 10,100 rubber bullets, 2,033 bean bag rounds, and used 1,491 bottles of pepper spray, to disperse protesters, according to a report by the city’s police watchdog. The watchdog, the Independent Police Complaints Council, has been criticized by the UN Human Rights Committee for a lack of independence, as its members are appointed by Hong Kong’s Chief Executive. The body has no investigative powers and cannot call on or protect its own witnesses.
“National security is the pretext that the Chinese authorities most often use to justify imprisoning journalists in conditions that pose a threat to their lives, sometimes even going so far as to impose a life sentence,” said Cédric Alviani, the head of RSF’s East Asia bureau.
On May 28, the American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations (AFL–CIO), the largest U.S. coalition of labor unions, awarded its annual human rights award, the George Meany-Lane Kirkland Human Rights Award, to Civil Human Rights Front (CHRF), a Hong Kong-based coalition of pro-democracy groups.
“I hope everyone will continue to work hard in the future, to continue our calls for the five demands, and oppose the national security law,” CHRF stated. The five demands include an independent inquiry into police violence and universal suffrage.