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China Plans to Implement Credit System in Hong Kong, Macau

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Chinese Troops Will Not Interfere in Hong Kong’s Affairs: Military Commander

HONG KONG/WASHINGTON—The Chinese military commander responsible for Hong Kong has assured a Pentagon official that Chinese troops will not interfere in the city’s affairs—an apparent signal that they will stay in their barracks amid renewed political upheaval. Trucks full of white-gloved People’s Liberation Army soldiers rolled into Hong Kong within hours of Britain handing its colony back to Chinese rule in 1997, sparking anxiety and raising lingering questions about their role. Major General Chen Daoxiang was speaking at the start of a meeting last month with David Helvey, principal deputy assistant secretary of defense for Indo-Pacific Security Affairs, according to people briefed on the discussion. Helvey met Chen on a courtesy call at the PLA’s Hong Kong headquarters on June 13—just meters from where a day earlier police clashed violently…

China plans to impose a form of its social credit system in Hong Kong, according to recently announced policy guidelines.

In mainland China, authorities monitor citizens’ activities, including online purchases and daily behaviors in public spaces, and assign them a “trustworthiness” score. Local authorities compile “blacklists” of individuals with bad credit scores, who are then banned from public services such as boarding a plane or buying a train ticket.

Parts of the system were rolled out in 2014; it’s set to be implemented across the entirety of China in 2020. Critics have raised concerns that such surveillance could be used by authorities to track political targets or dissidents.

On July 5, the provincial government of Guangdong Province released a three-year action plan (2018–2020) for the development of the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macau Greater Bay Area.

That refers to the Chinese regime’s ambition to build a tech hub in the Pearl River Delta in southern China, integrating nine mainland Chinese cities and the nearby regions of Macau and Hong Kong.

Both regions are former European colonies that have since been returned to Chinese sovereignty under the “one country, two systems” principle—under which Beijing promised a high degree of autonomy and freedoms preserved.

But in Hong Kong, residents have complained that in the past two decades since the city returned to Chinese rule, Beijing’s encroaching influence has affected local politics, education, and freedom of the press. Macau residents have also, in recent years, demanded universal suffrage in their elections for the city’s top official.

The new action plan lists 100 items, placed into nine different categories, such as building modern industries that are competitive internationally; improving living conditions and the business environment; and accelerating the process of opening up “a new front,” a Party slogan referring to economic reforms.

In that category, the social credit system was mentioned. In particular, the Greater Bay Area would “explore the implementation of a rewards and punishment credit system for companies.”

In another Guangdong Province document released on July 5, authorities explained that the plan aimed to further develop the “one country, two systems” model and integrate “credit and information sharing” between Guangdong Province, Hong Kong, and Macau.

Two Guangdong government agencies will be tasked with making the social credit system possible, as well as the Guangzhou City branch of China’s central bank, the People’s Bank of China. The documents didn’t offer details.

On the Facebook page of Hong Kong cable news channel i-Cable, many users left comments expressing concerns that Hongkongers could be subject to the individual scoring system—though the Chinese documents didn’t make reference to such plans.

One user with the name “Cloud Ip” wrote: “It is the end of the world.” “Sau Saam” wrote that the “social credit system in China is, in fact, a new slavery system.”

Another user with the name “Ada Lee” quipped: “So you get ten points deducted every time you join a march, and then you cannot even travel overseas.”

In Hong Kong, there have been mass protests in the past month, attended by millions who opposed a controversial extradition bill that would allow any country, including mainland China, to seek extradition of suspects. Many are concerned that if the bill were to pass, it would erode the city’s judicial independence, which would signal the end of the “one country, two systems” model.

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