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PoliticsHong Kong leader Carrie Lam to not seek second term

Hong Kong leader Carrie Lam to not seek second term

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Hong Kong’s pioneer Carrie Lam reported she would not look for a moment term in office after a questionable residency that has seen numerous of the territory’s respectful opportunities dissolved.

As a chief official, Ms Lam managed a turbulent period that saw a more prominent Chinese impact in Hong Kong taking after enormous challenges in 2019. Ms Lam, 64, was Beijing’s handpicked choice entering office in 2017.

On Monday, she told correspondents she was organizing her family. “There’s as it were one thought which is family. I have told everybody sometime recently that family is my, to begin with, need in terms of my thought.

They think it’s time for me to go domestic,” she told columnists on Monday. Hong Kong’s previous Chief Secretary John Lee is tipped to be the favoured substitution for Ms Lam. Her announcement on Monday came amid reports that Ms Lee, the second-highest-ranking official, was due to present his candidacy for the leadership position this week.

The city’s leaders are selected by a small committee, whose members are nearly all pro-Beijing loyalists. They’re due to select the new chief executive next month.

Mr Lee, a former police officer, was also a leading security official during the 2019 protests. He was elevated to the leadership ranks last year, in a sign, analysts said, of Beijing’s intention to focus on security in Hong Kong.

What is Carrie Lam’s legacy?

A bureaucrat with decades of encounter, Ms Lam is Hong Kong’s, to begin with, female leader. But she before long got to be one of the foremost divisive figures within the politically turbulent city. She started months of challenges in 2019 after proposing a law that would have permitted extraditions to terrain China. The mass dissents drove to China forcing an arrangement of arrangements to “reestablish security” and fix control over Hong Kong and its residents. The most unmistakable of these was a major national security law that criminalized most shapes of political dissent and contradiction and decreased the city’s autonomy. Ms Lam supported the widely-criticised law saying it was not all “fate and anguish“.

“Compared with the national security laws of other nations, it may be a or maybe mild law,” she has said. “Its scope isn’t as wide as that in other nations and indeed China.” Since the national security law’s execution in 2020, Hong Kong has seen a progression of pro-democracy activists, previous legislators additionally media figures arrested. Other changes made by China during her residency included changing the participation make-up of the city’s decision committee – to grant more voting control to pro-Beijing figures, investigators said.

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