
Hong Kong government unveils national security law details
- Beijing has given mainland China authorities broad powers to hear ‘complicated’ cases, with life imprisonment for the most serious offences
- Mainland agents will be allowed to operate freely in Hong Kong and outside any supervision of local law enforcement
Key points:
- Beijing will exercise jurisdiction over “complicated” cases such as those relating to foreign interference, or when local authorities cannot enforce law effectively, or the nation’s security is under major threat
- For cases Beijing has jurisdiction over, the mainland Chinese agency in Hong Kong will launch an investigation and Supreme People’s Procuratorate will assign prosecution authorities. The Supreme People’s Court will assign courts to hear the cases
- The law is not retroactive
- A dedicated police unit is to investigate cases, while a mainland Chinese security office will be set up in Hong Kong
Hong Kong national security law full text:
Suspects can be extradited to mainland China in cases that involve “complicated situations” of interference by foreign forces; cases in which the local government cannot effectively enforce the law and ones where national security is under “serious and realistic threats”.
For those cases in which Beijing exercises jurisdiction, a mainland agency that will be established in Hong Kong to enforce national security will carry out investigations and the Supreme People’s Procuratorate will assign authorities to lead prosecution. The Supreme People’s Court will assign courts to hear those cases.
Article 54 states the new agency, alongside the Office of the Commissioner of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Hong Kong and the local government, must adopt measures to “strengthen the management” of foreign non-governmental organisations and media agencies.

03:33
Beijing passes national security law for Hong Kong
Information about the operation of a new national security commission will not be disclosed and its decisions are not subject to any judicial review.
All departments of the local administration must cooperate with the new mainland Chinese agency or be held accountable.
The law also grants wide powers to mainland Chinese agents stationed in Hong Kong. Under Article 60, the officers and the vehicles they use to carry out their duties are not subject to checks by local law enforcement.
Fate of localist movement hangs in balance after security law passed
Professor Fu Hualing, law dean at the University of Hong Kong, said the provisions concerning Beijing’s jurisdictions over “very few cases” allowed for a large degree of discretion, which remained to be clearly defined.
“Once the central government takes over [jurisdiction], it takes away everything,” Fu said. “There is a ‘nationalisation’ of certain crimes. For the first time, national laws on criminal matters apply in Hong Kong and there is built-in rendition.”
Offences appear to be broadly defined. For instance, fuelling hatred of the local or central governments by “various unlawful ways” or seriously obstructing them in the formulation of policies or laws, under any guidance, funding or other forms of assistance from foreign organisations would constitute collusion.

Asking foreign organisations or agents to adopt sanctions against Hong Kong or the central government can also be deemed collusion.
The law also covers political candidates, with anyone convicted of a listed offence barred from running for local elections. Incumbent lawmakers, government officials and anyone else holding public office must step down immediately if they run afoul of the law.
While Beijing and Hong Kong officials have been promising the law will safeguard human rights, it does not make jury trials mandatory, nor does it promise open trials for all.
‘Yellow economic circle’ takes hit as protest-friendly shops back off
Media and members of the public can be banned from observing cases if the hearings involve state secrets or public order. Suspects will not be granted bail unless the judge is convinced they will not continue to take part in activities endangering national security.
Civic Party leader Alvin Yeung Ngok-kiu said the sweeping power mainland Chinese authorities would hold in enforcing the law seriously trampled on human rights and undermined the freedoms of the city.
“Beijing has the final say on what cases will fall into the category of China’s jurisdiction,” Yeung said. “They can arbitrarily arrest and extradite anyone to China for secret trials. It’s shameless for them to say they are safeguarding the ‘one country, two systems’.”
“If the authorities are still upholding the Basic Law, they should respect lawmakers’ duties to implement checks and balances in the legislature,” he said.

01:36
China to restrict visas for Americans ‘interfering’ in Hong Kong
But Basic Law Committee vice-chairwoman Maria Tam Wai-chu clarified officers would still need to obey laws in Hong Kong and those in mainland China.
“Hong Kong’s laws cannot control their acts while they are carrying out their duties, but they also have to work under the control and limitations of the mainland’s system,” Tam said.
Asked whether authorities would use existing laws or the new law to handle anyone who damaged transport facilities on Wednesday, the anniversary of the handover, Tam Yiu-chung, the city’s sole delegate to the National People’s Congress Standing Committee which passed the law, said local law enforcement and prosecution departments would have the say on the matter.
Additional reporting by Kanis Leung
