China on Wednesday opened its first office in Hong Kong to implement the controversial national security law, a move which is expected to impact the hundreds of foreign firms which are concerned over the vague language used in the legislation and its implications.
The office for Safeguarding National Security of the Central People''s Government in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR) was inaugurated on Wednesday, establishing for the first time the presence of
China’s security establishment in the former British colony after it came under the control of Beijing in 1997.
The new national security office places mainland Chinese agents in the heart of the territory for the first time.
The office is one element of a sweeping new law which outlaws criticism of China''s government, the BBC reported.
Hong Kong was, until the law was passed, only the part of China and not subject to such policies.