China yesterday defended the right of Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe to own a Hong Kong home after the he reportedly paid US$5 million for a villa in the former British colony.
“Hong Kong is a free port, and even Falun Gong practitioners can buy a property there, am I right?” a Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman in Beijing told yesterday’s South China Morning Post.
The comment came after the Sunday Times newspaper in London reported that Robert and Grace Mugabe had bought a home in a luxury complex in Hong Kong’s Tai Po district last year.
PHOTO: AFP
The spokesman’s comment referred to the Falun Gong movement, a religious sect banned in China but free to practice in Hong Kong, which has freedoms of speech guaranteed in its mini-constitution.
Police were called to the Mugabe property on Friday when two photographers working for the newspaper were allegedly assaulted as they attempted to deliver a letter and take picture of the villa.
The incident took place weeks after Grace Mugabe allegedly assaulted another Sunday Times photographer as he took pictures of her shopping in Hong Kong.
The Mugabes’ daughter Bona is at a university in Hong Kong and students in Zimbabwe have held protests demanding that she be deported and made to study in her home country.
Pro-democracy legislator Emily Lau (劉慧卿) called on the Hong Kong government to make clear its policy on whether politicians such as Mugabe should be allowed to visit or settle in the city.
Mugabe, whose country is in economic and political turmoil, is banned from traveling to the US or the EU. Children of Zimbabwe regime members have been refused admission to Australian universities.
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