MACAU, China — Macau on Friday marks 20 years since
the former colony was returned to China with a celebration led by President Xi Jinping touting the success of the
pliant gambling hub while Hong Kong boils.
The day's festivities will centre around the inauguration of a new leader for a city that China views as a shining example of its "one country, two systems" model.
Ho
Iat-
seng, a former member of China's top lawmaking body, won a one-horse race this summer to become Macau's new chief executive
-- a position that
is chosen by a 400-member committee stacked with Beijing loyalists.
Among those to attend the inauguration is his Hong Kong counterpart Carrie Lam, who
currently boasts record low approval ratings and has struggled to
end six months of huge and often violent pro-democracy protests.
Since the 1999 handover by Portugal, Macau has witnessed little of the dissent that has exploded in Hong Kong and has become hugely wealthy thanks to being the only place in China where gambling
is allowed.
Throughout his three-day visit, Xi has lavished praise on Macau's leaders and its comparative political calm.
"If the family lives in harmony, all affairs will prosper," he told delegates at a banquet on Thursday evening in which he listed a series of accomplishments he said Macau had excelled at.
"Loving the motherland
as well as Macau has become a core value across society," he said adding the city had "rejected
all sorts of disturbance from the outside."
Success story
Although Xi avoided all mention of Hong Kong in his speech, the message was clear.
China has repeatedly portrayed Hong Kong's huge protests as a foreign-backed colour revolution designed to destabilise the motherland, rejecting any suggestion Hong Kongers have legitimate political grievances.
Macau long ago passed the
kind of mainland style anti-sedition laws that have
been bitterly opposed for years in Hong Kong and protests are rare in the city where half the 700,000 strong population come from the mainland.
Multiple Hong Kong journalists were refused entry to Macau for the anniversary celebrations.
Xi remarked on
the passage of the national security laws in his speech on Thursday evening and noted that the Chinese national anthem and flags
were routinely used with pride in Macau.
In contrast, Hong Kongers often boo the national anthem at football matches while Chinese flags have become a frequent target for pro-democracy protesters, fuelling outrage in Beijing.
When Xi
made a visit to Hong Kong in 2017 for the city's own handover celebrations, he delivered a tough speech warning that any challenges to the authority of the central government was a "red line and
absolutely impermissible".
Since four centuries of Portuguese rule ended, Macau's fortunes have risen in lockstep with China's huge economic growth.
The skyline and economy have changed beyond recognition with glittering casinos raking in each week what Las Vegas collects in a month.
Macau's GDP has soared from $6.4 billion in 1999 to more than $55 billion while per capita GDP is the third highest in the world behind Luxembourg and Switzerland.
But there is a huge rich-poor divide and almost all its economic chips are in the gambling basket.