Members of the two House of Representatives of the United States launched a cross -party bill, asking Washington to evaluate whether the behavior of 49 officials including the Hong Kong Secretary of Law, Lin Dingguo, and the Director of the Police Department complied with the sanctions standards to investigate that they were suspected of suspectedResponsibilities of infringement of human rights.

According to Voice of the United States, the Chairman of the Asia -Pacific Group Committee of the House of Representatives of the House of Representatives of the House of Representatives, the Chairman of the Asia -Pacific Group Committee of the US House of Representatives, Jin Yingyu (John Curtis), who is also a Republican Federal Republican member of the Republican Party, and the Democratic Federation of the Democratic Party of MassachusettsCongress Jim McGoverN launched the Hong Kong Sanctions Act on Thursday (November 2nd).

The bill lists 49 Hong Kong officials, asking the president to evaluate whether the sanctions should be made in accordance with the existing US regulations.The named officials include: Lin Dingguo, the director of the law of law, the secretary -general of the National Security Council, the director of the National Security Council, Xiao Zeyi, the director of the Police Department, Du Libing, the judge of the High Court of the High Court, and Su Huide, the president of the referee court.Many named judges are the designated judges of the Hong Kong National Security Law.

Jin Yingyu said that if the bill is passed, the administrative official will allow administrative officials to "take strong and decisive actions, support the liberal Hong Kong people who love freedom, and hold the responsibility of Hong Kong officials invading human rights."

McGen said that the bill only required administrative officials to explain whether the behavior of these Hong Kong officials meet the standards of sanctions.

Former US President Trump in July 2020, he signed an administrative order with two bills including Hong Kong Human Rights and Democratic Law and the Hong Kong Autonomous Law, which terminated Hong Kong's special status.In August of the same year, the US Ministry of Finance announced sanctions on 11 Lugang officials, including Lin Zhengyue, Zheng Ruoxuan, Li Jiachao, Deng Bingqiang, Lu Weicong, Zeng Guowei, Chen Guoji, Xia Baolong, Zhang Xiaoming, Luo Huining, Zheng Yanxiong.

The US Treasury said that the reason for sanctions was that these officials participated in the formulation of the Hong Kong National Security Law and strictly targeting Hong Kong's democratic forces.