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Hong Kong politics
Hong KongPolitics

Xi’s Victory Day speech ‘wake-up call’ for peace, with Hong Kong playing role: Paul Chan

Hong Kong will enhance role as ‘superconnector” and ‘super value-adder’, while contributing to national development strategies, finance chief says

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Writing on his weekly blog on Sunday, Hong Kong’s finance chief Paul Chan (centre) says the Victory Day military parade in Beijing earlier this week was a “testament” to China’s commitment to safeguarding peace through strength. Photo: Handout
Connor Mycroft

President Xi Jinping’s speech marking the 80th anniversary of China’s victory over Japan in World War II serves as a “wake-up call”, Hong Kong’s finance chief has said, as he laid out how the city is bolstering its role as a “superconnector” amid geopolitical challenges.

Financial Secretary Paul Chan Mo-po said on Sunday that the Victory Day military parade in Beijing on Wednesday was a “testament” to China’s commitment to safeguarding peace through strength.

“President Xi Jinping’s important speech emphasised that humanity’s destiny is shared, and that only by treating each other as equals and coexisting in harmony can all countries and nations safeguard common security, eliminate the root causes of war, and prevent the recurrence of historical tragedies,” Chan said on his weekly blog.

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“This speech serves as a wake-up call in the current international landscape.”

Hong Kong would further enhance its role as a “superconnector” and “super value-adder,” while actively contributing to national development strategies, Chan said.

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During his keynote speech at the Victory Day military parade last week, Xi stressed that China would stand on the right side of history, while proclaiming that the country’s rejuvenation was “unstoppable” and that the peaceful development of humanity would win out.

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