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Oz halts HK extradition treaty

Offers 10,000 visas to students, temporary skilled workers

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Melbourne, July 9

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Prime Minister Scott Morrison on Thursday announced the suspension of Australia’s extradition treaty with Hong Kong over the controversial Chinese national security law imposed there and offered visas to 10,000 students and temporary skilled workers from the former British territory to start a new life in this country.

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‘Probe China’s role’

Washington: A group of 14 US lawmakers have introduced a Bill in the Congress which demands the government to identify, analyse, and combat alleged efforts made by the Chinese government to exploit the Covid pandemic for nationalistic gains. PTI

The move came after Chinese President Xi Jinping last month signed a controversial legislation to impose a national security law in Hong Kong that allowed Beijing to crackdown against dissent, criminalising sedition and curtailing protests with punishments up to life in prison.

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Scott Morrison, Australian PM

‘Acknowledgement of fundamental change’

Our decision represents an acknowledgement of the fundamental change of circumstances in relation to Hong Kong because of the new security law, which in our view undermines the ‘one country, two systems’ framework.

“Our decision to suspend the extradition agreement with Hong Kong represents an acknowledgement of the fundamental change of circumstances in relation to Hong Kong because of the new security law, which in our view undermines the ‘one country, two systems’ framework, and Hong Kong’s own basic law and the high degree of autonomy guaranteed in the Sino-British Joint Declaration that was set out there,” Morrison said in Canberra. — PTI

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