A successful Hong Kong businessman is forsaking his interests and relationships in Mainland China to pursue a 3-point plan to rescue Hong Kong’s student protesters, to revoke China’s sovereignty over Hong Kong, and to delegitimize the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) through legislation and court action in the United States.
Earlier this year, Elmer Yuen sent a message to all of his friends in China.
“I don’t feel like contributing to this regime anymore, so count me out. You won’t see me again,” Yuen wrote. Yuen also told his associates to “go and work with somebody else” on the projects in which he had been involved.
Rescue Hong Kong’s Students
Yuen wants to ensure that American universities commit to offer Hong Kong students places in American universities and that the U.S. government will issue visas to allow them to take those places up.
“I was very sympathetic to the kids,” Yuen said, referring to his participation in the protests that began in June 2019. Those demonstrations began over a proposed extradition law that threatened the rights of Hong Kong citizens to exercise civil and political rights in the former British colony. The protests are ongoing in response to a proposed National Security Law that the Communist government in Beijing is planning to enact in Hong Kong later this year.
“[The students] have a record [having been arrested for protesting], they don’t get to good schools, they don’t get a good job. So, we need them to be educated here. They’re finished in HK, unless the Communists go,” Yuen said.
Yuen pointed out that there are now plenty of opportunities for Hong Kong students to study in the United States, as so many mainland Chinese students are ending their studies here.
Right to Self-Determination
In a letter addressed to U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, Yuen has laid out his thinking on how to protect Hong Kong from communist China’s increasing encroachment upon the former British colony’s rights.
Yuen believes that China is in violation of the treaty commitments it made in the handover of Hong Kong sovereignty from Britain to the People’s Republic of China in 1997. Those commitments, made in 1985 and incorporated in the Sino-British Joint Declaration, constitute a treaty that is lodged with the United Nations.
“The Chinese Communists have not done anything of their part in the Sino-British Joint Declaration,” Yuen said. The British did their part, though.
“The British left them with money, they didn’t take anything away. They basically walked off, and Chris Patten called it the biggest dowry since Cleopatra,” Yuen said. Patten was the last British governor of Hong Kong. Patten has called the new national security legislation a “betrayal” of Hong Kong.
“Especially now with the National Security Act, they’re trying to take away our right to legislate [through] our own Legislative Council,” Yuen added.
“Since they’ve broken their promises, they should not be entitled to the sovereignty rights of Hong Kong,” Yuen declared.
“So,” Yuen continued, “the sovereignty rights should belong to Britain.” However, he added, “the British don’t want Hong Kong.” The solution? “Give Hong Kong to the people of Hong Kong.” Yuen plans to garner U.S. support for this part of his plan.
“The last time Britain and China talked, the people of Hong Kong were forgotten, so do the right thing this time, for the people of Hong Kong,” Yuen said.
There is one condition, however. “Within 6 months we have to do a referendum, and the people have to decide what they want, whether they want to side with the British, the Americans, the Communists, or they want to self-rule. A referendum.”
Laughing, Yuen added, “Of course Chinese communists hate referendums.”
Hong Kongers, Yuen said, “are the free people of China, the free Chinese.”
“The Mainland are the slave Chinese,” Yuen added. “They want to ethnically cleanse the free Chinese, and the minute they start the security law then they will start their holocaust, because then they will have the legal right to do that.”
The Rudy Guiliani Model
“We want to eliminate the Chinese Communist Party once and for all, not one by one. Not even 100 by 100. One fell swoop,” Yuen declared.
Yuen sees parallels between his mission to take down the CCP and Rudy Giuliani’s assault on the Mafia in the 1980s, when Giuliani was U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York.
Yuen says that there are at least 14 major crimes that the CCP has committed in its 71-year history for which the CCP can be held accountable.
“If an organization consistently committed such crimes against humanity, what do you call it? It’s a criminal organization. It’s organized crime against humanity for 71 years,” Yuen said.
“Giuliani used RICO against the Mafia,” he added.
That 21-month trial, known as the “Case of Cases” in the media, indicted the bosses of all five of the New York Mafia crime families, along with many of their subordinates. Those families, known together as The Commission, were charged with operating a collective ruling council that ran a variety of illegal enterprises throughout the East Coast. The trial was held from February 1985 to November 1986.
In that trial, Rudy Giuliani used the 1970 Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (RICO) Act, a federal law in the United States that specifically targets organized crime, to bring charges against bosses and key players in each of the Mafia families.
Giuliani told TIME magazine that his approach was no less than “to wipe out the five families.”
The key to RICO is that it focuses on ongoing criminal enterprises. The power of RICO does not stop with criminal prosecutions, however. RICO also allows civil penalties to be levied on racketeering activities that are performed by an ongoing criminal enterprise.
Yuen says the CCP is exactly that.
“America is very angry. You have over 100 different actions going on, between Congress, the administration, and class-action lawsuits,” said Yuen.
But, he continued, none of those things are “targeting the real mastermind.”
“The real mastermind is the CCP. The Chinese people are the victims. The real criminal is the CCP, and there are 90 million of them,” Yuen said.
And, Yuen suggested, trying to sanction one or two or even 100 at a time is futile. “How long does it take to get 90 million?”, he added rhetorically.
Yuen said he has a plan “using two routes. One route is legislation through the Congress.”
Yuen would like to see the U.S. Congress adopt a resolution designating the CCP as a criminal organization. Then, “all the members should be treated as criminals. Everyone should be subject to Magnitsky…It’s not so difficult to pass. Because who’s scared of it? Everybody has suffered from this pandemic.” The Global Magnitsky Act allows the United States to impose visa denials and sanctions on individuals guilty of human rights abuses and significant corruption.
“The other one is through the judiciary,” Yuen said. He plans to use RICO to sue the CCP in federal court.
Yuen foresees that his mission will need to circumvent at least one roadblock, however.
“There are many friends of China” in Washington, and even in the administration, Yuen suggested.
Asked how, if he got a RICO ruling, it would translate into bringing down the CCP, Yuen has a simple answer.
“Would you do business with Iran today?”
“We strangle them. You know…the guy who signs the contract is normally a Party member.”
Saying the ruling would mean that the contract is invalid, Yuen continued, “We’re going to catch every Communist member, their family, their assets, their bank accounts, their credit cards, everything, you name it. And who would join the Communist Party again? Everyone would want to leave the Party!”
Background of a Revolutionary
Yuen was born in Shanghai and joined his father in Hong Kong in 1956, when he was 7 years old.
The senior Yuen had fled to Hong Kong after the newly-installed Communist authorities stripped him of his assets “to fight the Americans in Korea.” Nancy Yuen, his wife, remained in Shanghai with their four children, developing an avid passion for the Jehovah’s Witnesses, and proselytizing throughout China on behalf of her faith.
For those religious activities, she disappeared in 1956. Her family was never notified, and she was given no trial. As with other religious leaders in China at that time, she was held in a Chinese labor camp for 20 years. Encouraged by camp guards to denounce her faith as a means of gaining her freedom, her son says she repeatedly refused, thus remaining in the camp until after the arrest of the Gang of Four in 1976, which signaled the closing chapter of the Cultural Revolution.
With the end of a decade of political extremism, chaos, and death, Yuen was able to blaze a trail back into the mainland. Using the gift of a factory as a lever, Yuen was able to get his newly-freed mother and two younger sisters out of China and into Hong Kong. Throughout the following years, Yuen opened factories throughout the country, investing in technology, property, and golf.
Yuen has shown that he is not risk averse.
The South China Morning Post reported in March 1993 that Yuen was a leading investor into one of China’s earliest and most celebrated golf clubs, at a time when an “uncertain political climate makes golf club ventures a dicey business,” the paper wrote at the time.
Yuen left the investment relatively early, and turned his attention to other investments throughout China, the most recent being a billion-dollar project to build natural gas and oil pipelines from Siberia to Inner Mongolia.
That project signals the end of Yuen’s business career in China, he said.
Motivated by Family
Yuen gets his resolve from his mother, he said. “I have her genes.”
But his immediate motivation to finally confront China was sparked by his grown children in Hong Kong, who declared that they were going to leave Hong Kong due to the impending dangers to Hong Kong’s freedoms.
Under quarantine for 14 days after entering Hong Kong during the Covid-19 pandemic, Yuen came up with his plan. His daughter posted his thoughts as a YouTube video, which then went viral. On June 4, Yuen posted a video letter to Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.
In the end, “China is not a country,” Yuen said. “It’s really a party. A Mafia party,” he added.
“What is a country? It has a constitution. Their constitution, it’s not a constitution; they can change it anytime they want,” Yuen continued. “The whole so-called country is a façade. It’s not one country two systems, it’s one Party two systems.”
From The Epoch Times