In a joint letter to Blinken, they noted that “despite the State Department’s assurance” that Lee had not been invited, the Hong Kong government said on November 1 that its chief executive had “personally received” an invitation from the US but was unable to attend for “scheduling reasons”.
“If true, this would mean that the State Department either deliberately lied to or misled Congress in July or later caved to the PRC demand, or both,” said the two lawmakers, who are among Congress’s most vocal critic’s of China’s government.
The Hong Kong government said last week that “according to convention” it had “received the invitation from the host economy to attend” and “had already replied that, due to scheduling issues,” Lee would not be attending. Financial Secretary Paul Chan Mo-po will instead lead the Hong Kong delegation.
Doubts about Hong Kong’s semi-autonomous status, guaranteed under agreements between Britain and China that ceded sovereignty over the city to Beijing in 1997, have only increased under the Biden administration.
The annual report required by Congress derided a decision last year by China’s top legislative body that Hong Kong’s courts would need the approval of the chief executive or a committee established to safeguard national security to allow the participation of foreign lawyers.
Beijing slams US lawmakers behind bill to sanction Hong Kong officials, judges
Beijing slams US lawmakers behind bill to sanction Hong Kong officials, judges
“Does continued recognition of [Hong Kong] as an Apec member economy distinct from the PRC contradict annual certifications made by the Secretary of State … that Hong Kong … does not hold the same level of autonomy it enjoyed prior to 1997?” the Gallagher-Rubio letter said.
“Will you rescind the invitation to Secretary Chan and ensure that no officials from [Hong Kong] attend the summit, since you have not made the certification … as to whether Hong Kong … has the same level of autonomy it enjoyed prior to 1997?”, it added.
The lawmakers also asked for copies of “the formal invitation, or any other written communication regarding Apec, extended to Chief Executive Lee and the entire Hong Kong … delegation”.