Hong Kong: There was little doubt over John Lee's election as Hong Kong's next chief executive. A career police officer and the city's security chief received over 99% of the vote from an election committee stacked with mostly pro-Beijing members. He was the sole candidate in Sunday's election. On July 1, the anniversary of Hong Kong's 1997 handover from Britain to China, Lee will take control of the semi-autonomous territory from Carrie Lam. She leaves after five tumultuous years that spanned pro-democracy protests in 2019, a subsequent crackdown that snuffed out virtually all dissent, and Hong Kong's worst coronavirus outbreak that has killed over 9,000 people this year.
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Lee, 64, spent more than three decades of his civil service career in the police force before he was appointed undersecretary of Hong Kong's security bureau in 2012. He was promoted to security minister in 2017 in Lam's government. He was a key figure in pushing for a proposed extradition bill in 2019 that would've sent Hong Kong suspects to mainland China, where courts operate under the ruling Communist Party.
But the bill sparked massive anti-government protests over fears that Beijing was encroaching on Hong Kong's autonomy, and soon morphed into calls for wider democratic rights, including universal suffrage. The government backtracked on the bill, but under Lee, police unleashed a heavy response that included the use of tear gas and rubber bullets against protesters as well as mass arrests. The following year, in 2020, Beijing imposed a sweeping national security law on Hong Kong, with Lee as its main supporter and enforcer. The law, which outlaws secession, subversion, terrorism and collusion with foreign forces in the city's affairs, was used to clear streets of protesters, silence government opponents and crack down on freewheeling media.
The same year, Lee and other Chinese as well as Hong Kong officials including Lam were sanctioned by the U.S. "for being involved in coercing, arresting, detaining, or imprisoning individuals under the authority of the National Security Law, as well as being involved in its development, adoption, or implementation." In June 2021, Lee was promoted to chief secretary for administration, effectively becoming the No. 2 official in Hong Kong. He resigned from his post in April to stand for the leadership polls. During his election campaign, YouTube terminated Lee's channel in compliance with U.S. sanctions — a move that Lee described as "bullying" and "unreasonable."
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