China’s No 3 leader Zhang Dejiang’s statement that the central government ‘bears the responsibility to supervise’ Hong Kong takes our columnist back to an era when the emperor exercised control over local administrations
Weeks before the 20th anniversary of Hong Kong’s handover, Zhang Dejiang, the third-highest-ranking state leader and head of the Communist Party’s coordination group on Hong Kong affairs, said the central government “bears the responsibility to supervise” whether “statutory public officers” in Hong Kong pledge allegiance to the mainland and Hong Kong.
During the Han period (206BC-AD220), China had one of the most sophisticated bureaucracies in the ancient world, which facilitated the administration of its vast empire. Centralised control was absolute, at least in theory. The central government was the fount of all political power at the local level, and it exercised that power through lines of command that, ultimately, led to the emperor.