CARRIE LAM:
In the last two years, one of the policy areas that I have spent most
time in is innovation and technology. Now,
I actually personally chair the steering committee.
In less than three months’ time, Hong Kong has been turned upside down,
and my life has been turned upside down.
But this is not the moment for self-pitifulness, although [name
redacted] nowadays it’s extremely difficult for me to go out. I have not been on the streets, not in the
shopping malls, can’t go to a hair salon, can’t do anything because my
whereabouts will be spread around the social media, the Telegram, the LIHKG,
and you could expect a big crowd of black T-shirts and black-masked young
people waiting for me.
I’m still brave enough to go and this afternoon, I’m still planning to go
if my security guards tell me later on that I can still go. But it’s really, I don’t want to cause
disruption, inconvenience to the organizers.
But as I said, this is not the time for me to self-pity myself. This is a time I come here, and I do other
closed-door sessions from time to time with people from all walks of life, and
the two things I said is, it’s not about self-pityness, it’s about making a
plea for forgiveness and then appeal for love.
I don’t want to spend your time, or waste your time, for you to ask me
what went wrong, and why it went wrong. But
for a chief executive to have caused this huge havoc to Hong Kong is
unforgivable. It’s just unforgivable. If I have a choice, the first thing is to
quit, having made a deep apology, is to step down. So I make a plea to you for your forgiveness.
This is something that no matter how well intended, I just want to put
this message across. This is not
something malicious. This is not
something instructed, coerced by the central government. This is out of a good intention, myself and
some of my key colleagues to try to plug legal loopholes in Hong Kong’s system,
very much prompted by our compassion for a single case, and this has proven to
be very unwise given the circumstances. And
this huge degree of fear and anxiety amongst people of Hong Kong vis-a-vis the
mainland of China, which we were not sensitive enough to feel and grasp. And, of course, it has been exaggerated and
misrepresented through very effective propaganda, if I may say so.
Now I want to make an appeal for love.
It’s not to pity me, or to sympathize with me, but love for Hong Kong. [Name redacted]
Then the question we need to ask, each one of us, is how to fix it, how
to fix it? I have to say that I have no sort of ready solutions, because the
scene changes so quickly. [Details
redacted]
But, of course, I’m sure in your hearts you will feel, and I’m sure a
large number of people feel that I do have a solution, that is a political one. But I have to tell you that this is where the
crux of the matter lies. Once an issue
has been elevated to the situation [name redacted], to a national level, to a
sort of sovereignty and security level, let alone in the midst of this sort of
unprecedented tension between the two big economies in the world. The room, the political room for the chief
executive who, unfortunately, has to serve two masters by constitution, that is
the central people’s government and the people of Hong Kong, that political
room for maneuvering is very, very, very limited. Because we were not trained to have that sort
of national perspectives, and I could only keep on putting in what I feel is
the Hong Kong situation and the Hong Kong sentiments. But whether those Hong Kong sentiments could
override the national perspective and the national sentiments? I’m sure you
know that now 1.4 billion mainland people already have formed a view about what
is happening in Hong Kong. So, without
going into a lot more details, I can only share with you discreetly that the
room for me to offer a political situation in order to relieve the tension, nor
to reduce the pressure on my frontline police officers in order to at least
respond, or pacify the large number of peaceful protesters who are so angry
with the government, with me in particular, of absolutely dead silence despite
repeated participation in the protests, is what causes me the biggest sadness.
So without that, what other means we have is Hong Kong’s core value, that
is the rule of law. The rule of law
takes several forms, of course law enforcement, our police officers who have
been suffering tremendously this time, especially on an occasion when they are
supposed to celebrate 175 years of police establishment, and especially at a
time when they were so proud of the crime figures which are still coming down. In fact, the first half year we still saw a
drop of four percent of total crimes in Hong Kong, and that was the best seen
in Hong Kong since 1972. And also they
have commissioned a survey to commemorate this occasion done not by a
pro-establishment group but by [name redacted], which indicated that confidence
in the police after Occupy Central has rebounced to a historic high. That was the sort of background to how much
the police have suffered.
So the rule of law requires law enforcement, so we have to tackle this
escalating violence by arresting those offenders and then put them through the
justice system, whether it’s prosecution by the Department of Justice in an
impartial manner without any interference from myself or from the Central
People’s government, and then finally in the courts.
With a little bit of hope that may help because we are seeing the numbers
reducing. We started off by an estimate
of about one to two thousand protesters who are very violent. Or put it that way, they are very willing to
resort to violence. They may not be
violent by nature but they are very willing to resort to violence, so, as
described by one expert, this is the, sort of, early signs of anarchism, that
they don’t trust the establishment, they don’t mind destroying things even if
they don’t know what destruction will bring.
[Details redacted] I’ll be very honest with you, it would be naïve for me
to paint you a rosy picture, that things will be fine or I have a deadline. But I can assure you that Beijing does not
have a deadline. They know this will
ripple on. So we have made special
arrangements and there will be a 1st of October national day celebrations but
still having a lot of disruptions. So we
are going for a modest, but solemn type of celebrations on the 1st of October,
which means that they and ourselves have no expectations that we could clear up
this thing before the 1st of October.
Another thing I want to assure you, that is my own feeling the pulse and
through discussions, CPG (Central People’s Government) has absolutely no plan
to send in the PLA. They are now doing,
sort of, acts which I’m sure you’re quite aware of amongst the Communist Party,
they’re just quite scared now. Because
they know that the price would be too huge to pay. Maybe they don’t care about Hong Kong, but
they care about ‘one country, two systems.’ They care about the country’s
international profile. It has taken
China a long time to build up to that sort of international profile and to have
some say, not only being a big economy but a responsible big economy, so to
forsake all those positive developments is clearly not on their agenda. But they’re willing to play long, they are
willing to play long, so you have no short-term solution. Hong Kong suffers, you lose tourism, economy,
you lose your IPOs and so, but you can’t do much about it. But after everything has been settled the
country will be there to help with maybe positive measures especially in the
Greater Bay Area. So our work on the
Greater Bay Area has actually not stopped.
[Name redacted]
[Name redacted] Of course, every one of you has your own circle, you have
your own friends, you have your own connections, you have your business contacts,
so try to impress upon them that we really need to put an end to the violence,
this is totally alien to Hong Kong and try to, as I said, appeal for
understanding and love. We love this
place, we love the people here. People
used to be very peaceful and inclusive and so on. Instead of taking a position on every issue,
either your friend or your foe, and so on.
When the time comes, now Hong Kong has survived the death pronounced by
some people before 1997. At this point
in time, although I’m actually pessimistic, but Hong Kong is not dead yet. Maybe she is very, very sick but she is not
dead yet. We still have fundamentals
here, we still have the nation behind us.
So Hong Kong will have to go through several stages. The first is stamping out the violence, maybe
doing other things in time to come which at the moment are not very available. Having gone through this stage, the next
stage will be, in accordance with the bible, would be resurrection. We will need to come back to life, some life. So thereafter we want a reborn Hong Kong and
a relaunching of this Hong Kong brand. [Name
redacted]
Thank you very much.
Transcript by James Pomfret and Greg Torode in Hong Kong. Edited by Peter Hirschberg.
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