Submitted by asteriskspace t3_10meaah in technology
nicuramar t1_j65hi6r wrote
Reply to comment by tuttut97 in Apple Brings Mainland Chinese Web Censorship to Hong Kong by asteriskspace
Or that a company operating somewhere, has to follow the laws of that place.
noorbeast t1_j65r8dg wrote
It is the Chinese who are not following historical agreements re Hong Kong: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-china-40426827
China agreed to govern Hong Kong under the principle of "one country, two systems", where the city would enjoy "a high degree of autonomy, except in foreign and defence affairs" for the next 50 years.
Hong Kong became a Special Administrative Region, and would retain certain freedoms, including:
an independent judiciary
multiple political parties
freedom of assembly and speech
The territory has its own mini-constitution - the Basic Law - that enshrines these rights.
It states that "the ultimate aim" is to elect the territory's leader, the chief executive, "by universal suffrage" and "in accordance with democratic procedures".
nicuramar t1_j67c8ac wrote
> It is the Chinese who are not following historical agreements re Hong Kong: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-china-40426827
Sure, and I agree, but that seems to be a separate matter. China is an authoritarian regime and all that..
ControlledShutdown t1_j67c5pv wrote
Not if the laws are un-American! /s
[deleted] t1_j66vu52 wrote
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