US lawmakers urge sanctions against Hong Kong prosecutors for ‘undermining’ city’s rule of law
- Move would offer ‘tangible demonstration’ of Biden administration’s interest in making officials uphold their legal obligations, they say
- Advisory committee counts more than 10,000 people arrested on ‘political and protest-related offences’ since 2019
“Such sanctions will be a tangible demonstration of the administration’s interest in the [People’s Republic of China] and Hong Kong authorities upholding their international legal obligations as well as international interest in the release of political prisoners,” the bipartisan group of 12 senators and representatives wrote.
The lawmakers included Senator Jeff Merkley, Democrat of Oregon, and Representative James McGovern, Democrat of Massachusetts, co-chairs of the Congressional-Executive Commission on China (CECC).
In their letter, the lawmakers pointed to sanctioning power provided to the administration in recent years by the Hong Kong Human Rights and Democracy Act and the Hong Kong Autonomy Act, which direct the US government to punish individuals deemed responsible for human rights abuses and the erosion of Hong Kong’s autonomy.