The US Senate on Thursday unanimously approved a Bill that would lay out sanctions on Chinese officials who undermine Hong Kong’s autonomy as Beijing pushes forward with its draconian security law.
The House of Representatives still needs to pass the Bill, which would allow sanctions in the United States against Chinese officials and the Hong Kong police as well as banks that conduct “significant transactions” with them.
The vote comes as China presses forward with a security law that would enforce punishment over subversion and other perceived threats in Hong Kong.
“They are moving forward in their process to take away the liberties of the people of Hong Kong. So time is of the essence,” said Senator Chris Van Hollen, a Democrat who helped lead the charge on the Bill.
“Passing a Senate resolution as the consequence to their action is hardly going to be taken seriously in Beijing,” he said on the Senate floor. “And that’s why it’s important to actually do something that shows that the government of China will pay a price if it continues down this path to extinguish those freedoms of the people in Hong Kong.”
US President Donald Trump’s administration has already declared that it no longer considers Hong Kong autonomous under US law.
For Republican Senator Pat Toomey, who co-sponsored the Bill, Beijing’s “greatest fear is that the people on the mainland will observe the freedoms in Hong Kong and decide maybe they’d like some of those freedoms too.”
“And that is a risk that the Chinese Communist leadership cannot tolerate,” he added.
The sanctions Bill is expected to easily pass in the Democratic-led House of Representatives, which has repeatedly taken China to task on rights issues, and sent to Trump for his signature.