Mr. Speaker, it is a pleasure for me to speak today about Hong Kong.
Hong Kong is a special and beautiful place. It also in many ways is a place of contrast. Breathtaking natural beauty is interspersed with urban beauty as apartments rise and mountains rise even higher. East meets west and the cutting edge of modernity grows in an environment with clear and evident tradition. It is also a place that has unfortunately never known true democracy, yet which is also historically at a very high level of freedom.
I went to Hong Kong last fall with our foreign affairs committee and quickly fell in love with it. It is a beautiful place possessed of an inspiring order, poise, and dignity.
Hong Kong is part of China and it has an important role to play as a light for freedom in China. When Hong Kong joined China, it was under a commitment that Hong Kong's distinctiveness would be respected. The structure was to be one country, two systems. It has a genuine market economy and it has a legislature.
However, Hong Kong is not a true democracy. There are vast differences in the number of electors in each constituency. In some cases, companies as opposed to individuals are the electors. The system is not a proper democracy and it creates the condition for significant manipulation by the government on the mainland.
On the other hand, despite lacking proper democratic institutions, the people of Hong Kong stand up for their freedom and for the freedom of all Chinese citizens. During our trip we met with NGOs in Hong Kong who offered us more genuine insight than we were able to receive on the mainland. I met and was inspired by pro-democracy legislators and activists who have risked everything to stand up for their freedom.
The question that I raised in the House earlier this week with respect to Hong Kong was a question of human rights but also a question of political structure. The Government of Canada needs to stand up for the particular political arrangements that Hong Kong was promised and for the people's fundamental right to real democracy. If China will not keep its commitments to Hong Kong, how can we expect it to keep its commitments to anyone else?
Perhaps the best illustration of what makes Hong Kong special is what happens on June 4. In 1989, pro-democracy protestors were massacred in Beijing. Troops fired on civilians with automatic weapons and tanks. In every other part of China this occasion is not marked in any public way, but in Hong Kong people mark the occasion and keep the memory of those who died alive on Chinese soil. They did not die in vain.
I raised a specific question about Hong Kong, dealing with the heroes of Hong Kong's democracy movement who are now being given absurd prison sentences for no justifiable reason. Has the government spoken publicly or to the Chinese government about these individual cases or about the declining political situation in Hong Kong in terms of respect for Hong Kong's freedom? Has Hong Kong come up in discussions with the Government of China? We think it should and we would like to know if it has.
This was my question this week. It was not answered in question period, so I am asking it again. Has the government specifically discussed these cases or the lack of respect for Hong Kong's basic law in general, publicly or directly, with the Government of China?