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Xi lands in Macau for China handover anniversary party
By Yan ZHAO
Macau (AFP) Dec 18, 2019

China state TV axes interview with UK ambassador
Beijing (AFP) Dec 18, 2019 - The British embassy voiced disappointment on Wednesday after the English-language branch of Chinese state television decided not to air an interview with the ambassador that included a discussion on Hong Kong.

Beijing has repeatedly warned Britain to keep off its internal affairs as London has voiced concerns over increasingly violent pro-democracy protests in the former British colony.

Ashley Rodgers, head of communications at the embassy, told AFP that Ambassador Barbara Woodward was asked about Hong Kong during an interview in October with Liu Xin, a well-known anchor at China Global Television Network (CGTN).

"They had a good discussion and it's a shame that it won't be broadcast," Rodgers said, declining to give more details about what the ambassador said.

On Twitter, Rodgers said: "Disappointed that CGTN has decided not to broadcast Liu Xin's interview with HMA (Her Majesty's Ambassador) for 'technical reasons'.

"It was an engaging discussion on relations & viewers would have enjoyed it. This unfortunately highlights the challenges we face working with a tightly controlled media," Rodgers wrote.

Neither Liu nor a member of her team were immediately available for comment.

CGTN is an arm of Chinese state TV giant CCTV and a soft power tool for Beijing.

Under the terms of the 1997 handover deal from British to Chinese rule, Hong Kong enjoys rights and liberties unseen on the mainland, including freedom of expression.

Prior to taking office as prime minister, Britain's Boris Johnson said in July that he backed Hong Kong protesters "every inch of the way".

In November his government said it was "seriously concerned" over the violence and an escalation between protests and police.

Separately, CGTN is facing a probe by Britain's broadcasting watchdog following a complaint filed by a former employee of the British consulate in Hong Kong, Simon Cheng.

A human rights group, Safeguard Defenders, said last month that state-run CGTN, which holds a licence to broadcast in Britain, had aired an item including "direct lies, violations of his privacy and unproven allegations reported as facts".

Cheng, a Hong Kong citizen, has alleged that Chinese police tortured and interrogated him about London's role in the protests.

Police later released a video purporting to show him confessing to soliciting prostitutes, which Cheng said in his complaint to the regulator was shown on CGTN.

Cheng said he felt he had no choice but to confess to the charge, which he said was offered by police as an alternative to "indefinite criminal detention".

Chinese president Xi Jinping landed in Macau on Wednesday as the city prepares to mark 20 years since the former Portuguese colony was returned, a celebration that stands in stark contrast to months of unrest in neighbouring Hong Kong.

Security has been ramped up ahead of Xi's three-day visit which culminates on Friday's anniversary.

China's authoritarian leadership is keen to showcase Macau as a successful example of its "one country, two systems" model, with party leaders heaping praise on a pliant city of 700,000 that has grown rich on gambling and deference to authoritarian rule.

"The Chinese people and the central government are proud of the achievements and progress Macau has made in the past 20 years since its return to the motherland," Xi said on arrival at the city's airport, a troupe of school children waving Chinese and Macau flags behind him.

Since the 1999 handover by Lisbon, Macau has witnessed little of the dissent that has exploded in Hong Kong during six months of often violent pro-democracy protests as large chunks of the population seethes under Beijing's rule.

Like Hong Kong it maintains its own currency, judiciary and free market. But it has long since passed mainland style anti-sedition laws that have been successfully resisted by Hong Kongers.

Limited details have been released by authorities on Xi's schedule.

He will meet local leaders and attend a dinner and a cultural performance on Thursday. The following day Xi will preside over the inauguration of the city's new leader Ho Iat-seng.

A former member of China's top lawmaking body, Ho won a one-horse race this summer to become chief executive -- a position that is chosen by a 400-member committee stacked with Beijing loyalists.

Bunting and banners hailing the anniversary were erected across the city, including on some of the casinos that serve as the territory's lifeblood.

- Transport checks, entries denied -

Security has been dramatically tightened ahead of Xi's visit.

Police set up checkpoints and extra screenings for passenger arrivals while authorities said some major roads would see closures.

The city's first light rail line announced it would shut down for the duration, just a week after it was first opened to the public while the airport said some flights would be rescheduled.

Security checks were also ramped up in Hong Kong's ferry terminals and on a huge bridge and tunnel system linking the two cities.

Since last week police from mainland China have been manning a newly created checkpoint on an artificial island that links the bridge and tunnel system between Hong Kong, Macau and Zhuhai, the first time they have done so.

Multiple journalists with Hong Kong passports working for local and international media have been denied entry to Macau in the run up to the anniversary while a group of pro-democracy lawmakers were denied permission to board a ferry on Wednesday.

Earlier this month the president and chairman of Hong Kong's American Chamber of Commerce were also denied entry to Macau without explanation.

- Dramatic transformation -

"It's totally one country, one system," a 34-year-old local who regularly travels to Hong Kong told AFP, adding that protesting in Macau was "pointless and dangerous".

"The reason it looks like it's working well is because Macau people don't protest."

But he said there was local anger about the wealth of the city's elites, the limited transport infrastructure and severe overcrowding, even though the population have become wealthier.

Macau's skyline and economy have changed beyond recognition since four centuries of Portuguese rule ended in 1999, with glittering casinos the backbone of the city's dramatic rise.

As the only place in China where gambling is allowed, Macau's GDP has soared from $6.4 billion in 1999 to more than $55 billion.

Per capita GDP is the third highest in the world behind Luxembourg and Switzerland, according to the International Monetary Fund, while its casinos now rake in each week the same as Las Vegas makes in a month.

"The difference in the economy is like the sky and the earth," Chang Sio Kun, a 60-year-old local who recently retired, told AFP.

"There are casinos, more and more tourists and it's easy to find a job with a high salary," he added.

But while Macau has grown rich and been politically stable in the 20 years of Chinese rule, it has many vulnerabilities.

Much of the city's wealth is concentrated in the hands of a small elite and all its economic chips are in the gambling basket which still accounts for 80 percent of government revenue.


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China's Xi gives Lam unwavering support; Confirms cross-border bridge arrests
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Chinese President Xi Jinping told beleaguered Hong Kong leader Carrie Lam on Monday that she had Beijing's "unwavering support" despite another huge pro-democracy rally earlier this month and her government's thrashing at recent local elections. The city has been upended by six months of massive pro-democracy protests that have seen violent battles between police and hardcore demonstrators, as well as regular transport disruption. Protesters have called for the unpopular Lam to stand down as lea ... read more

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