TAIPEIChina must react sincerely to the needs of the Hong Kong people if it hopes to resolve the city's political issues, Taiwan said on Friday (May 22) as it urged Beijing not to lead the previous British colony into "bigger turmoil" with wrong policy decisions.
"(China and the Hong Kong government) should not limit the freedom and democracy of the Hong Kong people," Taiwan's Presidential Office spokesman Alex Huang said on Friday morning.
"The root of the solution is to open discussions within the society soon and with candour," he added.
Taiwan's Mainland Affairs Council also said in a statement that China's Communist Party has wrongly blamed external influences and Hong Kong independence "separatists" for the instability in the territory.
The comments come after China announced plans to push a controversial national security law for Hong Kong, which will likely bypass the city's legislature through a rarely used constitutional method.
"In light of the new circumstances and need, the National People's Congress (NPC) is exercising its constitutional power" to establish a new legal framework and enforcement mechanism to safeguard national security in Hong Kong, Zhang Yesui, spokesman for the China's National People's Congress, told a briefing on Thursday.
The move follows months of pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong, which comes under China's "one country, two systems" principle.
According to a draft of the legislation, China's proposed new legislation for Hong Kong would require the territory to quickly finish enacting national security regulations under its mini-constitution, the Basic Law.
China's action could spark fresh protests in Hong Kong, which enjoys several freedoms not allowed on the mainland. The often violent demonstrations in Hong Kong the previous year plunged the city into its deepest turmoil since it returned to Beijing's rule in 1997.
The plan is also a red flag for Taiwan, as Chinese President Xi Jinping said in January the previous year that Beijing is determined to rule Taiwan under the "one country, two systems" principle. China considers Taiwan a renegade province that must be united with the mainland, by force if necessary.
"(What China plans on doing) proves that 'one country, two systems' goes against democracy and freedom, which will only fuel our conviction to guard Taiwan's freedom, democracy and sovereignty," said Mr Huang, the presidential office spokesman.