Ex-Policeman Named Hong Kong’s No. 2 as China Prioritizes Security

Hong Kong’s top security official John Lee will take over the city’s No. 2 spot in a cabinet reshuffle. It’s the latest sign that a crackdown on dissent, such as on pro-democracy newspaper Apple Daily, is central to China’s long-term plans for the Asian financial center.

“One could not say that as the secretary for security for many years, his experience is limited to the police background or limited to the law enforcement,” said Chief Executive Carrie Lam, as she explained the decision.

Security Secretary John Lee — a former long-time police official — will be promoted to chief secretary, replacing Matthew Cheung, the official Xinhua News Agency reported, citing a decision by China’s cabinet. The move comes just before the one-year anniversary of Beijing imposing a sweeping national security law on the former British colony and days after Lee led the city’s push to shut down the pro-democracy Apple Daily newspaper.

Police Commissioner Chris Tang will take over Lee’s position, the State Council decided, according to Xinhua. Raymond Siu will take over Tang’s position at the law enforcement agency.

Senior appointments are made at the recommendation of the Hong Kong government, but need final approval from Beijing. The appointments were reported earlier by local media including the South China Morning Post and Sing Tao newspapers.