https://www.wsj.com/articles/trump-signs-hong-kong-sanctions-bill-11594762613?mod=e2tw President Trump signed into law a bipartisan bill that requires sanctions on Chinese officials who crack down on the rights of Hong Kong residents to free speech and peaceful assembly, as well as the banks that do business with those officials. Mr. Trump, speaking to reporters in the White House Rose Garden on Tuesday, also said he had signed an executive order that he said would end preferential U.S. treatment for Hong Kong. The bill sailed through both houses of Congress by unanimous consent as China moved to impose a new national security law giving Beijing more control over Hong Kong following massive antigovernment protests there. The U.S., U.K. and other Western countries have criticized the move for violating the high degree of autonomy promised to Hong Kong when Britain returned its former colony to Chinese rule in 1997. The bill would impose sanctions on people or entities that the administration identifies as materially contributing to the erosion of Hong Kong’s autonomy. Examples include a police unit cracking down on protesters or Chinese Communist Party officials who enforce the national-security law. Banks found knowingly doing business with blacklisted officials and agencies could also be sanctioned. A provision in the bill gives Congress the ability to override a president’s decision to waive or terminate sanctions through a joint resolution of disapproval, which must pass both the House and Senate by a veto-proof two-thirds majority.
President Trump signed into law a bipartisan bill that requires sanctions on Chinese officials who crack down on the rights of Hong Kong residents to free speech and peaceful assembly, as well as the banks that do business with those officials. Mr. Trump, speaking to reporters in the White House Rose Garden on Tuesday, also said he had signed an executive order that he said would end preferential U.S. treatment for Hong Kong. The bill sailed through both houses of Congress by unanimous consent as China moved to impose a new national security law giving Beijing more control over Hong Kong following massive antigovernment protests there. The U.S., U.K. and other Western countries have criticized the move for violating the high degree of autonomy promised to Hong Kong when Britain returned its former colony to Chinese rule in 1997.
The bill would impose sanctions on people or entities that the administration identifies as materially contributing to the erosion of Hong Kong’s autonomy. Examples include a police unit cracking down on protesters or Chinese Communist Party officials who enforce the national-security law. Banks found knowingly doing business with blacklisted officials and agencies could also be sanctioned. A provision in the bill gives Congress the ability to override a president’s decision to waive or terminate sanctions through a joint resolution of disapproval, which must pass both the House and Senate by a veto-proof two-thirds majority.
还是支持Trump.
Biden不行, 该进nursing home了.
你懂啥?好多优惠都没了
赞一下老川打红痛快淋漓!
那中共就完全没什么可担心的了。是吧?