LONDON, Jun 09 (IPS) – Nothing was extra predictable than repression. Merely for holding candles and flowers, folks had been taken away by Hong Kong’s police.
The event was the anniversary of the Tiananmen Sq. Bloodbath, 4 June 1989. Hong Kong was till not too long ago residence to mass annual vigils the place 1000’s gathered to maintain alive the reminiscence of that day. However that’s all gone now within the crackdown that adopted large-scale protests for democracy that erupted in 2019.
Hong Kong’s authorities are evidently decided to erase any type of acknowledgement that the bloodbath ever occurred. Memorials and artworks commemorating it have been removed. Books that point out the tragedy have disappeared from libraries. Retailers promoting the LED candles generally used to mark the event had been visited by the authorities within the run as much as this yr’s anniversary.
The organisation behind the vigil, the Hong Kong Alliance in Assist of Patriotic Actions in China, closed itself down in 2021 following a police investigation. A number of of its leaders had been jailed in March.
As a substitute of internet hosting the standard vigil, this yr Hong Kong’s Victoria Park was residence to a carnival celebrating Chinese language rule. Individuals eager to mark the event had to take action in non-public.
That is solely the tip of the iceberg. Persons are mourning not solely the numerous who died on 4 June 1989 but in addition the Hong Kong vanishing earlier than their eyes.
Additional than ever away from democracy
When Hong Kong was handed over to China by the UK in 1997, China agreed to keep up the nation’s distinct political and financial buildings for the subsequent 50 years, below the banner of ‘one nation, two methods’.
Hong Kong’s Primary Regulation assured civic rights, together with freedoms of affiliation, peaceable meeting and expression. China dedicated to maneuver in the direction of common suffrage for the election of Hong Kong’s Chief Govt, the top of presidency.
However following the democracy protests that burst out in 2019, China has unilaterally torn up that settlement. Three years in the past, the federal government handed the Nationwide Safety Regulation, a sweeping piece of laws that criminalises criticism of the authorities. It’s been used alongside current legal guidelines, such because the regulation on sedition, to jail leaders of the democracy motion.
China by no means made good on its promise of common suffrage. It’s gone in the wrong way. Present Chief Govt John Lee – who as safety chief led the violent crackdown on democracy protests – was chosen final yr by a hand-picked 1,500-member Election Committee, which duly endorsed him as the only candidate.
The Legislative Council, Hong Kong’s parliament, had already been neutered. The variety of straight elected seats has been slashed and individuals are disqualified from standing in the event that they query China’s sovereignty over Hong Kong.
Now the District Councils are within the firing line. When the final elections for the municipal our bodies had been held, within the thick of democracy protests in November 2019, pro-democracy events triumphed.
Such a result’s now not possible. In 2021, a regulation was handed requiring all district councillors to swear an oath of allegiance affirming their ‘patriotism’ for China. A lot of the pro-democracy candidates elected in 2019 had been disqualified or resigned.
Now when new district councillors are chosen in November, solely 20 per cent of seats will probably be straight elected. The authorities will fill the remainder with their supporters, all vetted to make sure their ‘patriotism’. Little marvel that the Civic Occasion, one in all Hong Kong’s main pro-democracy events, not too long ago introduced it was closing down.
A hollowed-out Hong Kong
Hong Kong was as soon as a rustic the place folks felt protected to protest. It had a flourishing media and publishing trade. Now journalists are criminalised and key impartial media have shut down.
Civil society organisations and trade unions have done the same. The remaining organisations are scattered, practising self-censorship. Protests proceed to be heavily restricted: this yr a deliberate Worldwide Girls’s Day march was cancelled after police threats.
Individuals proceed to attempt to discover methods to specific dissent, however any small gesture can appeal to the state’s ire. The loss of life of Queen Elizabeth II gave people an opportunity to make use of public mourning to specific at with the regression since handover. However when a vigil was held through the Queen’s funeral, a harmonica participant was arrested for daring to play the tune Glory to Hong Kong, related to the democracy protests.
Final yr 5 speech therapists had been convicted of manufacturing ‘seditious publications’. Their crime was to supply kids’s books during which sheep defend their villages from wolves. This was taken to be an allegory of China’s management of Hong Kong.
On a regular basis repression is making Hong Kong a hollowed-out nation, its inhabitants falling. Some faculties face closure as a result of falling scholar numbers. Many have fled, not wanting their kids to develop up in a rustic the place schooling is indoctrination. The curriculum has been reworked to teach college students loyalty reasonably than impartial thought. Many academics are leaving the nation or taking early retirement.
With the authorized system dealing with growing interference and political stress, attorneys are additionally amongst these fleeing.
A key take a look at would be the trial of Jimmy Lai, former media proprietor and democracy campaigner. He’s already been found guilty on quite a few counts. His newspaper, Apple Each day, as soon as Hong Kong’s most generally learn pro-democracy paper, shut down in 2021. He faces trial below the Nationwide Safety Regulation, which may imply a life sentence.
The judges who will strive Lai have been handpicked by John Lee. In the meantime the authorities have tried to prevent Lai’s defence lawyer, UK barrister Tim Owen, representing him in courtroom. In March they passed a law giving Lee the ability to ban international attorneys engaged on nationwide safety circumstances. It isn’t wanting promising.
Lai is one in all Hong Kong’s 1,508 political prisoners. Even because the inhabitants shrinks, the imprisoned inhabitants simply retains getting larger. The candles that commemorate the Tiananmen Sq. Bloodbath and the craving for democracy will proceed to flare world wide in exile – however these lights are being extinguished in Hong Kong.
Andrew Firmin is CIVICUS Editor-in-Chief, co-director and author for CIVICUS Lens and co-author of the State of Civil Society Report.
Follow @IPSNewsUNBureau
Follow IPS News UN Bureau on Instagram
© Inter Press Service (2023) — All Rights ReservedOriginal source: Inter Press Service
LONDON, Jun 09 (IPS) – Nothing was extra predictable than repression. Merely for holding candles and flowers, folks had been taken away by Hong Kong’s police.
The event was the anniversary of the Tiananmen Sq. Bloodbath, 4 June 1989. Hong Kong was till not too long ago residence to mass annual vigils the place 1000’s gathered to maintain alive the reminiscence of that day. However that’s all gone now within the crackdown that adopted large-scale protests for democracy that erupted in 2019.
Hong Kong’s authorities are evidently decided to erase any type of acknowledgement that the bloodbath ever occurred. Memorials and artworks commemorating it have been removed. Books that point out the tragedy have disappeared from libraries. Retailers promoting the LED candles generally used to mark the event had been visited by the authorities within the run as much as this yr’s anniversary.
The organisation behind the vigil, the Hong Kong Alliance in Assist of Patriotic Actions in China, closed itself down in 2021 following a police investigation. A number of of its leaders had been jailed in March.
As a substitute of internet hosting the standard vigil, this yr Hong Kong’s Victoria Park was residence to a carnival celebrating Chinese language rule. Individuals eager to mark the event had to take action in non-public.
That is solely the tip of the iceberg. Persons are mourning not solely the numerous who died on 4 June 1989 but in addition the Hong Kong vanishing earlier than their eyes.
Additional than ever away from democracy
When Hong Kong was handed over to China by the UK in 1997, China agreed to keep up the nation’s distinct political and financial buildings for the subsequent 50 years, below the banner of ‘one nation, two methods’.
Hong Kong’s Primary Regulation assured civic rights, together with freedoms of affiliation, peaceable meeting and expression. China dedicated to maneuver in the direction of common suffrage for the election of Hong Kong’s Chief Govt, the top of presidency.
However following the democracy protests that burst out in 2019, China has unilaterally torn up that settlement. Three years in the past, the federal government handed the Nationwide Safety Regulation, a sweeping piece of laws that criminalises criticism of the authorities. It’s been used alongside current legal guidelines, such because the regulation on sedition, to jail leaders of the democracy motion.
China by no means made good on its promise of common suffrage. It’s gone in the wrong way. Present Chief Govt John Lee – who as safety chief led the violent crackdown on democracy protests – was chosen final yr by a hand-picked 1,500-member Election Committee, which duly endorsed him as the only candidate.
The Legislative Council, Hong Kong’s parliament, had already been neutered. The variety of straight elected seats has been slashed and individuals are disqualified from standing in the event that they query China’s sovereignty over Hong Kong.
Now the District Councils are within the firing line. When the final elections for the municipal our bodies had been held, within the thick of democracy protests in November 2019, pro-democracy events triumphed.
Such a result’s now not possible. In 2021, a regulation was handed requiring all district councillors to swear an oath of allegiance affirming their ‘patriotism’ for China. A lot of the pro-democracy candidates elected in 2019 had been disqualified or resigned.
Now when new district councillors are chosen in November, solely 20 per cent of seats will probably be straight elected. The authorities will fill the remainder with their supporters, all vetted to make sure their ‘patriotism’. Little marvel that the Civic Occasion, one in all Hong Kong’s main pro-democracy events, not too long ago introduced it was closing down.
A hollowed-out Hong Kong
Hong Kong was as soon as a rustic the place folks felt protected to protest. It had a flourishing media and publishing trade. Now journalists are criminalised and key impartial media have shut down.
Civil society organisations and trade unions have done the same. The remaining organisations are scattered, practising self-censorship. Protests proceed to be heavily restricted: this yr a deliberate Worldwide Girls’s Day march was cancelled after police threats.
Individuals proceed to attempt to discover methods to specific dissent, however any small gesture can appeal to the state’s ire. The loss of life of Queen Elizabeth II gave people an opportunity to make use of public mourning to specific at with the regression since handover. However when a vigil was held through the Queen’s funeral, a harmonica participant was arrested for daring to play the tune Glory to Hong Kong, related to the democracy protests.
Final yr 5 speech therapists had been convicted of manufacturing ‘seditious publications’. Their crime was to supply kids’s books during which sheep defend their villages from wolves. This was taken to be an allegory of China’s management of Hong Kong.
On a regular basis repression is making Hong Kong a hollowed-out nation, its inhabitants falling. Some faculties face closure as a result of falling scholar numbers. Many have fled, not wanting their kids to develop up in a rustic the place schooling is indoctrination. The curriculum has been reworked to teach college students loyalty reasonably than impartial thought. Many academics are leaving the nation or taking early retirement.
With the authorized system dealing with growing interference and political stress, attorneys are additionally amongst these fleeing.
A key take a look at would be the trial of Jimmy Lai, former media proprietor and democracy campaigner. He’s already been found guilty on quite a few counts. His newspaper, Apple Each day, as soon as Hong Kong’s most generally learn pro-democracy paper, shut down in 2021. He faces trial below the Nationwide Safety Regulation, which may imply a life sentence.
The judges who will strive Lai have been handpicked by John Lee. In the meantime the authorities have tried to prevent Lai’s defence lawyer, UK barrister Tim Owen, representing him in courtroom. In March they passed a law giving Lee the ability to ban international attorneys engaged on nationwide safety circumstances. It isn’t wanting promising.
Lai is one in all Hong Kong’s 1,508 political prisoners. Even because the inhabitants shrinks, the imprisoned inhabitants simply retains getting larger. The candles that commemorate the Tiananmen Sq. Bloodbath and the craving for democracy will proceed to flare world wide in exile – however these lights are being extinguished in Hong Kong.
Andrew Firmin is CIVICUS Editor-in-Chief, co-director and author for CIVICUS Lens and co-author of the State of Civil Society Report.
Follow @IPSNewsUNBureau
Follow IPS News UN Bureau on Instagram
© Inter Press Service (2023) — All Rights ReservedOriginal source: Inter Press Service
LONDON, Jun 09 (IPS) – Nothing was extra predictable than repression. Merely for holding candles and flowers, folks had been taken away by Hong Kong’s police.
The event was the anniversary of the Tiananmen Sq. Bloodbath, 4 June 1989. Hong Kong was till not too long ago residence to mass annual vigils the place 1000’s gathered to maintain alive the reminiscence of that day. However that’s all gone now within the crackdown that adopted large-scale protests for democracy that erupted in 2019.
Hong Kong’s authorities are evidently decided to erase any type of acknowledgement that the bloodbath ever occurred. Memorials and artworks commemorating it have been removed. Books that point out the tragedy have disappeared from libraries. Retailers promoting the LED candles generally used to mark the event had been visited by the authorities within the run as much as this yr’s anniversary.
The organisation behind the vigil, the Hong Kong Alliance in Assist of Patriotic Actions in China, closed itself down in 2021 following a police investigation. A number of of its leaders had been jailed in March.
As a substitute of internet hosting the standard vigil, this yr Hong Kong’s Victoria Park was residence to a carnival celebrating Chinese language rule. Individuals eager to mark the event had to take action in non-public.
That is solely the tip of the iceberg. Persons are mourning not solely the numerous who died on 4 June 1989 but in addition the Hong Kong vanishing earlier than their eyes.
Additional than ever away from democracy
When Hong Kong was handed over to China by the UK in 1997, China agreed to keep up the nation’s distinct political and financial buildings for the subsequent 50 years, below the banner of ‘one nation, two methods’.
Hong Kong’s Primary Regulation assured civic rights, together with freedoms of affiliation, peaceable meeting and expression. China dedicated to maneuver in the direction of common suffrage for the election of Hong Kong’s Chief Govt, the top of presidency.
However following the democracy protests that burst out in 2019, China has unilaterally torn up that settlement. Three years in the past, the federal government handed the Nationwide Safety Regulation, a sweeping piece of laws that criminalises criticism of the authorities. It’s been used alongside current legal guidelines, such because the regulation on sedition, to jail leaders of the democracy motion.
China by no means made good on its promise of common suffrage. It’s gone in the wrong way. Present Chief Govt John Lee – who as safety chief led the violent crackdown on democracy protests – was chosen final yr by a hand-picked 1,500-member Election Committee, which duly endorsed him as the only candidate.
The Legislative Council, Hong Kong’s parliament, had already been neutered. The variety of straight elected seats has been slashed and individuals are disqualified from standing in the event that they query China’s sovereignty over Hong Kong.
Now the District Councils are within the firing line. When the final elections for the municipal our bodies had been held, within the thick of democracy protests in November 2019, pro-democracy events triumphed.
Such a result’s now not possible. In 2021, a regulation was handed requiring all district councillors to swear an oath of allegiance affirming their ‘patriotism’ for China. A lot of the pro-democracy candidates elected in 2019 had been disqualified or resigned.
Now when new district councillors are chosen in November, solely 20 per cent of seats will probably be straight elected. The authorities will fill the remainder with their supporters, all vetted to make sure their ‘patriotism’. Little marvel that the Civic Occasion, one in all Hong Kong’s main pro-democracy events, not too long ago introduced it was closing down.
A hollowed-out Hong Kong
Hong Kong was as soon as a rustic the place folks felt protected to protest. It had a flourishing media and publishing trade. Now journalists are criminalised and key impartial media have shut down.
Civil society organisations and trade unions have done the same. The remaining organisations are scattered, practising self-censorship. Protests proceed to be heavily restricted: this yr a deliberate Worldwide Girls’s Day march was cancelled after police threats.
Individuals proceed to attempt to discover methods to specific dissent, however any small gesture can appeal to the state’s ire. The loss of life of Queen Elizabeth II gave people an opportunity to make use of public mourning to specific at with the regression since handover. However when a vigil was held through the Queen’s funeral, a harmonica participant was arrested for daring to play the tune Glory to Hong Kong, related to the democracy protests.
Final yr 5 speech therapists had been convicted of manufacturing ‘seditious publications’. Their crime was to supply kids’s books during which sheep defend their villages from wolves. This was taken to be an allegory of China’s management of Hong Kong.
On a regular basis repression is making Hong Kong a hollowed-out nation, its inhabitants falling. Some faculties face closure as a result of falling scholar numbers. Many have fled, not wanting their kids to develop up in a rustic the place schooling is indoctrination. The curriculum has been reworked to teach college students loyalty reasonably than impartial thought. Many academics are leaving the nation or taking early retirement.
With the authorized system dealing with growing interference and political stress, attorneys are additionally amongst these fleeing.
A key take a look at would be the trial of Jimmy Lai, former media proprietor and democracy campaigner. He’s already been found guilty on quite a few counts. His newspaper, Apple Each day, as soon as Hong Kong’s most generally learn pro-democracy paper, shut down in 2021. He faces trial below the Nationwide Safety Regulation, which may imply a life sentence.
The judges who will strive Lai have been handpicked by John Lee. In the meantime the authorities have tried to prevent Lai’s defence lawyer, UK barrister Tim Owen, representing him in courtroom. In March they passed a law giving Lee the ability to ban international attorneys engaged on nationwide safety circumstances. It isn’t wanting promising.
Lai is one in all Hong Kong’s 1,508 political prisoners. Even because the inhabitants shrinks, the imprisoned inhabitants simply retains getting larger. The candles that commemorate the Tiananmen Sq. Bloodbath and the craving for democracy will proceed to flare world wide in exile – however these lights are being extinguished in Hong Kong.
Andrew Firmin is CIVICUS Editor-in-Chief, co-director and author for CIVICUS Lens and co-author of the State of Civil Society Report.
Follow @IPSNewsUNBureau
Follow IPS News UN Bureau on Instagram
© Inter Press Service (2023) — All Rights ReservedOriginal source: Inter Press Service
LONDON, Jun 09 (IPS) – Nothing was extra predictable than repression. Merely for holding candles and flowers, folks had been taken away by Hong Kong’s police.
The event was the anniversary of the Tiananmen Sq. Bloodbath, 4 June 1989. Hong Kong was till not too long ago residence to mass annual vigils the place 1000’s gathered to maintain alive the reminiscence of that day. However that’s all gone now within the crackdown that adopted large-scale protests for democracy that erupted in 2019.
Hong Kong’s authorities are evidently decided to erase any type of acknowledgement that the bloodbath ever occurred. Memorials and artworks commemorating it have been removed. Books that point out the tragedy have disappeared from libraries. Retailers promoting the LED candles generally used to mark the event had been visited by the authorities within the run as much as this yr’s anniversary.
The organisation behind the vigil, the Hong Kong Alliance in Assist of Patriotic Actions in China, closed itself down in 2021 following a police investigation. A number of of its leaders had been jailed in March.
As a substitute of internet hosting the standard vigil, this yr Hong Kong’s Victoria Park was residence to a carnival celebrating Chinese language rule. Individuals eager to mark the event had to take action in non-public.
That is solely the tip of the iceberg. Persons are mourning not solely the numerous who died on 4 June 1989 but in addition the Hong Kong vanishing earlier than their eyes.
Additional than ever away from democracy
When Hong Kong was handed over to China by the UK in 1997, China agreed to keep up the nation’s distinct political and financial buildings for the subsequent 50 years, below the banner of ‘one nation, two methods’.
Hong Kong’s Primary Regulation assured civic rights, together with freedoms of affiliation, peaceable meeting and expression. China dedicated to maneuver in the direction of common suffrage for the election of Hong Kong’s Chief Govt, the top of presidency.
However following the democracy protests that burst out in 2019, China has unilaterally torn up that settlement. Three years in the past, the federal government handed the Nationwide Safety Regulation, a sweeping piece of laws that criminalises criticism of the authorities. It’s been used alongside current legal guidelines, such because the regulation on sedition, to jail leaders of the democracy motion.
China by no means made good on its promise of common suffrage. It’s gone in the wrong way. Present Chief Govt John Lee – who as safety chief led the violent crackdown on democracy protests – was chosen final yr by a hand-picked 1,500-member Election Committee, which duly endorsed him as the only candidate.
The Legislative Council, Hong Kong’s parliament, had already been neutered. The variety of straight elected seats has been slashed and individuals are disqualified from standing in the event that they query China’s sovereignty over Hong Kong.
Now the District Councils are within the firing line. When the final elections for the municipal our bodies had been held, within the thick of democracy protests in November 2019, pro-democracy events triumphed.
Such a result’s now not possible. In 2021, a regulation was handed requiring all district councillors to swear an oath of allegiance affirming their ‘patriotism’ for China. A lot of the pro-democracy candidates elected in 2019 had been disqualified or resigned.
Now when new district councillors are chosen in November, solely 20 per cent of seats will probably be straight elected. The authorities will fill the remainder with their supporters, all vetted to make sure their ‘patriotism’. Little marvel that the Civic Occasion, one in all Hong Kong’s main pro-democracy events, not too long ago introduced it was closing down.
A hollowed-out Hong Kong
Hong Kong was as soon as a rustic the place folks felt protected to protest. It had a flourishing media and publishing trade. Now journalists are criminalised and key impartial media have shut down.
Civil society organisations and trade unions have done the same. The remaining organisations are scattered, practising self-censorship. Protests proceed to be heavily restricted: this yr a deliberate Worldwide Girls’s Day march was cancelled after police threats.
Individuals proceed to attempt to discover methods to specific dissent, however any small gesture can appeal to the state’s ire. The loss of life of Queen Elizabeth II gave people an opportunity to make use of public mourning to specific at with the regression since handover. However when a vigil was held through the Queen’s funeral, a harmonica participant was arrested for daring to play the tune Glory to Hong Kong, related to the democracy protests.
Final yr 5 speech therapists had been convicted of manufacturing ‘seditious publications’. Their crime was to supply kids’s books during which sheep defend their villages from wolves. This was taken to be an allegory of China’s management of Hong Kong.
On a regular basis repression is making Hong Kong a hollowed-out nation, its inhabitants falling. Some faculties face closure as a result of falling scholar numbers. Many have fled, not wanting their kids to develop up in a rustic the place schooling is indoctrination. The curriculum has been reworked to teach college students loyalty reasonably than impartial thought. Many academics are leaving the nation or taking early retirement.
With the authorized system dealing with growing interference and political stress, attorneys are additionally amongst these fleeing.
A key take a look at would be the trial of Jimmy Lai, former media proprietor and democracy campaigner. He’s already been found guilty on quite a few counts. His newspaper, Apple Each day, as soon as Hong Kong’s most generally learn pro-democracy paper, shut down in 2021. He faces trial below the Nationwide Safety Regulation, which may imply a life sentence.
The judges who will strive Lai have been handpicked by John Lee. In the meantime the authorities have tried to prevent Lai’s defence lawyer, UK barrister Tim Owen, representing him in courtroom. In March they passed a law giving Lee the ability to ban international attorneys engaged on nationwide safety circumstances. It isn’t wanting promising.
Lai is one in all Hong Kong’s 1,508 political prisoners. Even because the inhabitants shrinks, the imprisoned inhabitants simply retains getting larger. The candles that commemorate the Tiananmen Sq. Bloodbath and the craving for democracy will proceed to flare world wide in exile – however these lights are being extinguished in Hong Kong.
Andrew Firmin is CIVICUS Editor-in-Chief, co-director and author for CIVICUS Lens and co-author of the State of Civil Society Report.
Follow @IPSNewsUNBureau
Follow IPS News UN Bureau on Instagram
© Inter Press Service (2023) — All Rights ReservedOriginal source: Inter Press Service
LONDON, Jun 09 (IPS) – Nothing was extra predictable than repression. Merely for holding candles and flowers, folks had been taken away by Hong Kong’s police.
The event was the anniversary of the Tiananmen Sq. Bloodbath, 4 June 1989. Hong Kong was till not too long ago residence to mass annual vigils the place 1000’s gathered to maintain alive the reminiscence of that day. However that’s all gone now within the crackdown that adopted large-scale protests for democracy that erupted in 2019.
Hong Kong’s authorities are evidently decided to erase any type of acknowledgement that the bloodbath ever occurred. Memorials and artworks commemorating it have been removed. Books that point out the tragedy have disappeared from libraries. Retailers promoting the LED candles generally used to mark the event had been visited by the authorities within the run as much as this yr’s anniversary.
The organisation behind the vigil, the Hong Kong Alliance in Assist of Patriotic Actions in China, closed itself down in 2021 following a police investigation. A number of of its leaders had been jailed in March.
As a substitute of internet hosting the standard vigil, this yr Hong Kong’s Victoria Park was residence to a carnival celebrating Chinese language rule. Individuals eager to mark the event had to take action in non-public.
That is solely the tip of the iceberg. Persons are mourning not solely the numerous who died on 4 June 1989 but in addition the Hong Kong vanishing earlier than their eyes.
Additional than ever away from democracy
When Hong Kong was handed over to China by the UK in 1997, China agreed to keep up the nation’s distinct political and financial buildings for the subsequent 50 years, below the banner of ‘one nation, two methods’.
Hong Kong’s Primary Regulation assured civic rights, together with freedoms of affiliation, peaceable meeting and expression. China dedicated to maneuver in the direction of common suffrage for the election of Hong Kong’s Chief Govt, the top of presidency.
However following the democracy protests that burst out in 2019, China has unilaterally torn up that settlement. Three years in the past, the federal government handed the Nationwide Safety Regulation, a sweeping piece of laws that criminalises criticism of the authorities. It’s been used alongside current legal guidelines, such because the regulation on sedition, to jail leaders of the democracy motion.
China by no means made good on its promise of common suffrage. It’s gone in the wrong way. Present Chief Govt John Lee – who as safety chief led the violent crackdown on democracy protests – was chosen final yr by a hand-picked 1,500-member Election Committee, which duly endorsed him as the only candidate.
The Legislative Council, Hong Kong’s parliament, had already been neutered. The variety of straight elected seats has been slashed and individuals are disqualified from standing in the event that they query China’s sovereignty over Hong Kong.
Now the District Councils are within the firing line. When the final elections for the municipal our bodies had been held, within the thick of democracy protests in November 2019, pro-democracy events triumphed.
Such a result’s now not possible. In 2021, a regulation was handed requiring all district councillors to swear an oath of allegiance affirming their ‘patriotism’ for China. A lot of the pro-democracy candidates elected in 2019 had been disqualified or resigned.
Now when new district councillors are chosen in November, solely 20 per cent of seats will probably be straight elected. The authorities will fill the remainder with their supporters, all vetted to make sure their ‘patriotism’. Little marvel that the Civic Occasion, one in all Hong Kong’s main pro-democracy events, not too long ago introduced it was closing down.
A hollowed-out Hong Kong
Hong Kong was as soon as a rustic the place folks felt protected to protest. It had a flourishing media and publishing trade. Now journalists are criminalised and key impartial media have shut down.
Civil society organisations and trade unions have done the same. The remaining organisations are scattered, practising self-censorship. Protests proceed to be heavily restricted: this yr a deliberate Worldwide Girls’s Day march was cancelled after police threats.
Individuals proceed to attempt to discover methods to specific dissent, however any small gesture can appeal to the state’s ire. The loss of life of Queen Elizabeth II gave people an opportunity to make use of public mourning to specific at with the regression since handover. However when a vigil was held through the Queen’s funeral, a harmonica participant was arrested for daring to play the tune Glory to Hong Kong, related to the democracy protests.
Final yr 5 speech therapists had been convicted of manufacturing ‘seditious publications’. Their crime was to supply kids’s books during which sheep defend their villages from wolves. This was taken to be an allegory of China’s management of Hong Kong.
On a regular basis repression is making Hong Kong a hollowed-out nation, its inhabitants falling. Some faculties face closure as a result of falling scholar numbers. Many have fled, not wanting their kids to develop up in a rustic the place schooling is indoctrination. The curriculum has been reworked to teach college students loyalty reasonably than impartial thought. Many academics are leaving the nation or taking early retirement.
With the authorized system dealing with growing interference and political stress, attorneys are additionally amongst these fleeing.
A key take a look at would be the trial of Jimmy Lai, former media proprietor and democracy campaigner. He’s already been found guilty on quite a few counts. His newspaper, Apple Each day, as soon as Hong Kong’s most generally learn pro-democracy paper, shut down in 2021. He faces trial below the Nationwide Safety Regulation, which may imply a life sentence.
The judges who will strive Lai have been handpicked by John Lee. In the meantime the authorities have tried to prevent Lai’s defence lawyer, UK barrister Tim Owen, representing him in courtroom. In March they passed a law giving Lee the ability to ban international attorneys engaged on nationwide safety circumstances. It isn’t wanting promising.
Lai is one in all Hong Kong’s 1,508 political prisoners. Even because the inhabitants shrinks, the imprisoned inhabitants simply retains getting larger. The candles that commemorate the Tiananmen Sq. Bloodbath and the craving for democracy will proceed to flare world wide in exile – however these lights are being extinguished in Hong Kong.
Andrew Firmin is CIVICUS Editor-in-Chief, co-director and author for CIVICUS Lens and co-author of the State of Civil Society Report.
Follow @IPSNewsUNBureau
Follow IPS News UN Bureau on Instagram
© Inter Press Service (2023) — All Rights ReservedOriginal source: Inter Press Service
LONDON, Jun 09 (IPS) – Nothing was extra predictable than repression. Merely for holding candles and flowers, folks had been taken away by Hong Kong’s police.
The event was the anniversary of the Tiananmen Sq. Bloodbath, 4 June 1989. Hong Kong was till not too long ago residence to mass annual vigils the place 1000’s gathered to maintain alive the reminiscence of that day. However that’s all gone now within the crackdown that adopted large-scale protests for democracy that erupted in 2019.
Hong Kong’s authorities are evidently decided to erase any type of acknowledgement that the bloodbath ever occurred. Memorials and artworks commemorating it have been removed. Books that point out the tragedy have disappeared from libraries. Retailers promoting the LED candles generally used to mark the event had been visited by the authorities within the run as much as this yr’s anniversary.
The organisation behind the vigil, the Hong Kong Alliance in Assist of Patriotic Actions in China, closed itself down in 2021 following a police investigation. A number of of its leaders had been jailed in March.
As a substitute of internet hosting the standard vigil, this yr Hong Kong’s Victoria Park was residence to a carnival celebrating Chinese language rule. Individuals eager to mark the event had to take action in non-public.
That is solely the tip of the iceberg. Persons are mourning not solely the numerous who died on 4 June 1989 but in addition the Hong Kong vanishing earlier than their eyes.
Additional than ever away from democracy
When Hong Kong was handed over to China by the UK in 1997, China agreed to keep up the nation’s distinct political and financial buildings for the subsequent 50 years, below the banner of ‘one nation, two methods’.
Hong Kong’s Primary Regulation assured civic rights, together with freedoms of affiliation, peaceable meeting and expression. China dedicated to maneuver in the direction of common suffrage for the election of Hong Kong’s Chief Govt, the top of presidency.
However following the democracy protests that burst out in 2019, China has unilaterally torn up that settlement. Three years in the past, the federal government handed the Nationwide Safety Regulation, a sweeping piece of laws that criminalises criticism of the authorities. It’s been used alongside current legal guidelines, such because the regulation on sedition, to jail leaders of the democracy motion.
China by no means made good on its promise of common suffrage. It’s gone in the wrong way. Present Chief Govt John Lee – who as safety chief led the violent crackdown on democracy protests – was chosen final yr by a hand-picked 1,500-member Election Committee, which duly endorsed him as the only candidate.
The Legislative Council, Hong Kong’s parliament, had already been neutered. The variety of straight elected seats has been slashed and individuals are disqualified from standing in the event that they query China’s sovereignty over Hong Kong.
Now the District Councils are within the firing line. When the final elections for the municipal our bodies had been held, within the thick of democracy protests in November 2019, pro-democracy events triumphed.
Such a result’s now not possible. In 2021, a regulation was handed requiring all district councillors to swear an oath of allegiance affirming their ‘patriotism’ for China. A lot of the pro-democracy candidates elected in 2019 had been disqualified or resigned.
Now when new district councillors are chosen in November, solely 20 per cent of seats will probably be straight elected. The authorities will fill the remainder with their supporters, all vetted to make sure their ‘patriotism’. Little marvel that the Civic Occasion, one in all Hong Kong’s main pro-democracy events, not too long ago introduced it was closing down.
A hollowed-out Hong Kong
Hong Kong was as soon as a rustic the place folks felt protected to protest. It had a flourishing media and publishing trade. Now journalists are criminalised and key impartial media have shut down.
Civil society organisations and trade unions have done the same. The remaining organisations are scattered, practising self-censorship. Protests proceed to be heavily restricted: this yr a deliberate Worldwide Girls’s Day march was cancelled after police threats.
Individuals proceed to attempt to discover methods to specific dissent, however any small gesture can appeal to the state’s ire. The loss of life of Queen Elizabeth II gave people an opportunity to make use of public mourning to specific at with the regression since handover. However when a vigil was held through the Queen’s funeral, a harmonica participant was arrested for daring to play the tune Glory to Hong Kong, related to the democracy protests.
Final yr 5 speech therapists had been convicted of manufacturing ‘seditious publications’. Their crime was to supply kids’s books during which sheep defend their villages from wolves. This was taken to be an allegory of China’s management of Hong Kong.
On a regular basis repression is making Hong Kong a hollowed-out nation, its inhabitants falling. Some faculties face closure as a result of falling scholar numbers. Many have fled, not wanting their kids to develop up in a rustic the place schooling is indoctrination. The curriculum has been reworked to teach college students loyalty reasonably than impartial thought. Many academics are leaving the nation or taking early retirement.
With the authorized system dealing with growing interference and political stress, attorneys are additionally amongst these fleeing.
A key take a look at would be the trial of Jimmy Lai, former media proprietor and democracy campaigner. He’s already been found guilty on quite a few counts. His newspaper, Apple Each day, as soon as Hong Kong’s most generally learn pro-democracy paper, shut down in 2021. He faces trial below the Nationwide Safety Regulation, which may imply a life sentence.
The judges who will strive Lai have been handpicked by John Lee. In the meantime the authorities have tried to prevent Lai’s defence lawyer, UK barrister Tim Owen, representing him in courtroom. In March they passed a law giving Lee the ability to ban international attorneys engaged on nationwide safety circumstances. It isn’t wanting promising.
Lai is one in all Hong Kong’s 1,508 political prisoners. Even because the inhabitants shrinks, the imprisoned inhabitants simply retains getting larger. The candles that commemorate the Tiananmen Sq. Bloodbath and the craving for democracy will proceed to flare world wide in exile – however these lights are being extinguished in Hong Kong.
Andrew Firmin is CIVICUS Editor-in-Chief, co-director and author for CIVICUS Lens and co-author of the State of Civil Society Report.
Follow @IPSNewsUNBureau
Follow IPS News UN Bureau on Instagram
© Inter Press Service (2023) — All Rights ReservedOriginal source: Inter Press Service
LONDON, Jun 09 (IPS) – Nothing was extra predictable than repression. Merely for holding candles and flowers, folks had been taken away by Hong Kong’s police.
The event was the anniversary of the Tiananmen Sq. Bloodbath, 4 June 1989. Hong Kong was till not too long ago residence to mass annual vigils the place 1000’s gathered to maintain alive the reminiscence of that day. However that’s all gone now within the crackdown that adopted large-scale protests for democracy that erupted in 2019.
Hong Kong’s authorities are evidently decided to erase any type of acknowledgement that the bloodbath ever occurred. Memorials and artworks commemorating it have been removed. Books that point out the tragedy have disappeared from libraries. Retailers promoting the LED candles generally used to mark the event had been visited by the authorities within the run as much as this yr’s anniversary.
The organisation behind the vigil, the Hong Kong Alliance in Assist of Patriotic Actions in China, closed itself down in 2021 following a police investigation. A number of of its leaders had been jailed in March.
As a substitute of internet hosting the standard vigil, this yr Hong Kong’s Victoria Park was residence to a carnival celebrating Chinese language rule. Individuals eager to mark the event had to take action in non-public.
That is solely the tip of the iceberg. Persons are mourning not solely the numerous who died on 4 June 1989 but in addition the Hong Kong vanishing earlier than their eyes.
Additional than ever away from democracy
When Hong Kong was handed over to China by the UK in 1997, China agreed to keep up the nation’s distinct political and financial buildings for the subsequent 50 years, below the banner of ‘one nation, two methods’.
Hong Kong’s Primary Regulation assured civic rights, together with freedoms of affiliation, peaceable meeting and expression. China dedicated to maneuver in the direction of common suffrage for the election of Hong Kong’s Chief Govt, the top of presidency.
However following the democracy protests that burst out in 2019, China has unilaterally torn up that settlement. Three years in the past, the federal government handed the Nationwide Safety Regulation, a sweeping piece of laws that criminalises criticism of the authorities. It’s been used alongside current legal guidelines, such because the regulation on sedition, to jail leaders of the democracy motion.
China by no means made good on its promise of common suffrage. It’s gone in the wrong way. Present Chief Govt John Lee – who as safety chief led the violent crackdown on democracy protests – was chosen final yr by a hand-picked 1,500-member Election Committee, which duly endorsed him as the only candidate.
The Legislative Council, Hong Kong’s parliament, had already been neutered. The variety of straight elected seats has been slashed and individuals are disqualified from standing in the event that they query China’s sovereignty over Hong Kong.
Now the District Councils are within the firing line. When the final elections for the municipal our bodies had been held, within the thick of democracy protests in November 2019, pro-democracy events triumphed.
Such a result’s now not possible. In 2021, a regulation was handed requiring all district councillors to swear an oath of allegiance affirming their ‘patriotism’ for China. A lot of the pro-democracy candidates elected in 2019 had been disqualified or resigned.
Now when new district councillors are chosen in November, solely 20 per cent of seats will probably be straight elected. The authorities will fill the remainder with their supporters, all vetted to make sure their ‘patriotism’. Little marvel that the Civic Occasion, one in all Hong Kong’s main pro-democracy events, not too long ago introduced it was closing down.
A hollowed-out Hong Kong
Hong Kong was as soon as a rustic the place folks felt protected to protest. It had a flourishing media and publishing trade. Now journalists are criminalised and key impartial media have shut down.
Civil society organisations and trade unions have done the same. The remaining organisations are scattered, practising self-censorship. Protests proceed to be heavily restricted: this yr a deliberate Worldwide Girls’s Day march was cancelled after police threats.
Individuals proceed to attempt to discover methods to specific dissent, however any small gesture can appeal to the state’s ire. The loss of life of Queen Elizabeth II gave people an opportunity to make use of public mourning to specific at with the regression since handover. However when a vigil was held through the Queen’s funeral, a harmonica participant was arrested for daring to play the tune Glory to Hong Kong, related to the democracy protests.
Final yr 5 speech therapists had been convicted of manufacturing ‘seditious publications’. Their crime was to supply kids’s books during which sheep defend their villages from wolves. This was taken to be an allegory of China’s management of Hong Kong.
On a regular basis repression is making Hong Kong a hollowed-out nation, its inhabitants falling. Some faculties face closure as a result of falling scholar numbers. Many have fled, not wanting their kids to develop up in a rustic the place schooling is indoctrination. The curriculum has been reworked to teach college students loyalty reasonably than impartial thought. Many academics are leaving the nation or taking early retirement.
With the authorized system dealing with growing interference and political stress, attorneys are additionally amongst these fleeing.
A key take a look at would be the trial of Jimmy Lai, former media proprietor and democracy campaigner. He’s already been found guilty on quite a few counts. His newspaper, Apple Each day, as soon as Hong Kong’s most generally learn pro-democracy paper, shut down in 2021. He faces trial below the Nationwide Safety Regulation, which may imply a life sentence.
The judges who will strive Lai have been handpicked by John Lee. In the meantime the authorities have tried to prevent Lai’s defence lawyer, UK barrister Tim Owen, representing him in courtroom. In March they passed a law giving Lee the ability to ban international attorneys engaged on nationwide safety circumstances. It isn’t wanting promising.
Lai is one in all Hong Kong’s 1,508 political prisoners. Even because the inhabitants shrinks, the imprisoned inhabitants simply retains getting larger. The candles that commemorate the Tiananmen Sq. Bloodbath and the craving for democracy will proceed to flare world wide in exile – however these lights are being extinguished in Hong Kong.
Andrew Firmin is CIVICUS Editor-in-Chief, co-director and author for CIVICUS Lens and co-author of the State of Civil Society Report.
Follow @IPSNewsUNBureau
Follow IPS News UN Bureau on Instagram
© Inter Press Service (2023) — All Rights ReservedOriginal source: Inter Press Service
LONDON, Jun 09 (IPS) – Nothing was extra predictable than repression. Merely for holding candles and flowers, folks had been taken away by Hong Kong’s police.
The event was the anniversary of the Tiananmen Sq. Bloodbath, 4 June 1989. Hong Kong was till not too long ago residence to mass annual vigils the place 1000’s gathered to maintain alive the reminiscence of that day. However that’s all gone now within the crackdown that adopted large-scale protests for democracy that erupted in 2019.
Hong Kong’s authorities are evidently decided to erase any type of acknowledgement that the bloodbath ever occurred. Memorials and artworks commemorating it have been removed. Books that point out the tragedy have disappeared from libraries. Retailers promoting the LED candles generally used to mark the event had been visited by the authorities within the run as much as this yr’s anniversary.
The organisation behind the vigil, the Hong Kong Alliance in Assist of Patriotic Actions in China, closed itself down in 2021 following a police investigation. A number of of its leaders had been jailed in March.
As a substitute of internet hosting the standard vigil, this yr Hong Kong’s Victoria Park was residence to a carnival celebrating Chinese language rule. Individuals eager to mark the event had to take action in non-public.
That is solely the tip of the iceberg. Persons are mourning not solely the numerous who died on 4 June 1989 but in addition the Hong Kong vanishing earlier than their eyes.
Additional than ever away from democracy
When Hong Kong was handed over to China by the UK in 1997, China agreed to keep up the nation’s distinct political and financial buildings for the subsequent 50 years, below the banner of ‘one nation, two methods’.
Hong Kong’s Primary Regulation assured civic rights, together with freedoms of affiliation, peaceable meeting and expression. China dedicated to maneuver in the direction of common suffrage for the election of Hong Kong’s Chief Govt, the top of presidency.
However following the democracy protests that burst out in 2019, China has unilaterally torn up that settlement. Three years in the past, the federal government handed the Nationwide Safety Regulation, a sweeping piece of laws that criminalises criticism of the authorities. It’s been used alongside current legal guidelines, such because the regulation on sedition, to jail leaders of the democracy motion.
China by no means made good on its promise of common suffrage. It’s gone in the wrong way. Present Chief Govt John Lee – who as safety chief led the violent crackdown on democracy protests – was chosen final yr by a hand-picked 1,500-member Election Committee, which duly endorsed him as the only candidate.
The Legislative Council, Hong Kong’s parliament, had already been neutered. The variety of straight elected seats has been slashed and individuals are disqualified from standing in the event that they query China’s sovereignty over Hong Kong.
Now the District Councils are within the firing line. When the final elections for the municipal our bodies had been held, within the thick of democracy protests in November 2019, pro-democracy events triumphed.
Such a result’s now not possible. In 2021, a regulation was handed requiring all district councillors to swear an oath of allegiance affirming their ‘patriotism’ for China. A lot of the pro-democracy candidates elected in 2019 had been disqualified or resigned.
Now when new district councillors are chosen in November, solely 20 per cent of seats will probably be straight elected. The authorities will fill the remainder with their supporters, all vetted to make sure their ‘patriotism’. Little marvel that the Civic Occasion, one in all Hong Kong’s main pro-democracy events, not too long ago introduced it was closing down.
A hollowed-out Hong Kong
Hong Kong was as soon as a rustic the place folks felt protected to protest. It had a flourishing media and publishing trade. Now journalists are criminalised and key impartial media have shut down.
Civil society organisations and trade unions have done the same. The remaining organisations are scattered, practising self-censorship. Protests proceed to be heavily restricted: this yr a deliberate Worldwide Girls’s Day march was cancelled after police threats.
Individuals proceed to attempt to discover methods to specific dissent, however any small gesture can appeal to the state’s ire. The loss of life of Queen Elizabeth II gave people an opportunity to make use of public mourning to specific at with the regression since handover. However when a vigil was held through the Queen’s funeral, a harmonica participant was arrested for daring to play the tune Glory to Hong Kong, related to the democracy protests.
Final yr 5 speech therapists had been convicted of manufacturing ‘seditious publications’. Their crime was to supply kids’s books during which sheep defend their villages from wolves. This was taken to be an allegory of China’s management of Hong Kong.
On a regular basis repression is making Hong Kong a hollowed-out nation, its inhabitants falling. Some faculties face closure as a result of falling scholar numbers. Many have fled, not wanting their kids to develop up in a rustic the place schooling is indoctrination. The curriculum has been reworked to teach college students loyalty reasonably than impartial thought. Many academics are leaving the nation or taking early retirement.
With the authorized system dealing with growing interference and political stress, attorneys are additionally amongst these fleeing.
A key take a look at would be the trial of Jimmy Lai, former media proprietor and democracy campaigner. He’s already been found guilty on quite a few counts. His newspaper, Apple Each day, as soon as Hong Kong’s most generally learn pro-democracy paper, shut down in 2021. He faces trial below the Nationwide Safety Regulation, which may imply a life sentence.
The judges who will strive Lai have been handpicked by John Lee. In the meantime the authorities have tried to prevent Lai’s defence lawyer, UK barrister Tim Owen, representing him in courtroom. In March they passed a law giving Lee the ability to ban international attorneys engaged on nationwide safety circumstances. It isn’t wanting promising.
Lai is one in all Hong Kong’s 1,508 political prisoners. Even because the inhabitants shrinks, the imprisoned inhabitants simply retains getting larger. The candles that commemorate the Tiananmen Sq. Bloodbath and the craving for democracy will proceed to flare world wide in exile – however these lights are being extinguished in Hong Kong.
Andrew Firmin is CIVICUS Editor-in-Chief, co-director and author for CIVICUS Lens and co-author of the State of Civil Society Report.
Follow @IPSNewsUNBureau
Follow IPS News UN Bureau on Instagram
© Inter Press Service (2023) — All Rights ReservedOriginal source: Inter Press Service
LONDON, Jun 09 (IPS) – Nothing was extra predictable than repression. Merely for holding candles and flowers, folks had been taken away by Hong Kong’s police.
The event was the anniversary of the Tiananmen Sq. Bloodbath, 4 June 1989. Hong Kong was till not too long ago residence to mass annual vigils the place 1000’s gathered to maintain alive the reminiscence of that day. However that’s all gone now within the crackdown that adopted large-scale protests for democracy that erupted in 2019.
Hong Kong’s authorities are evidently decided to erase any type of acknowledgement that the bloodbath ever occurred. Memorials and artworks commemorating it have been removed. Books that point out the tragedy have disappeared from libraries. Retailers promoting the LED candles generally used to mark the event had been visited by the authorities within the run as much as this yr’s anniversary.
The organisation behind the vigil, the Hong Kong Alliance in Assist of Patriotic Actions in China, closed itself down in 2021 following a police investigation. A number of of its leaders had been jailed in March.
As a substitute of internet hosting the standard vigil, this yr Hong Kong’s Victoria Park was residence to a carnival celebrating Chinese language rule. Individuals eager to mark the event had to take action in non-public.
That is solely the tip of the iceberg. Persons are mourning not solely the numerous who died on 4 June 1989 but in addition the Hong Kong vanishing earlier than their eyes.
Additional than ever away from democracy
When Hong Kong was handed over to China by the UK in 1997, China agreed to keep up the nation’s distinct political and financial buildings for the subsequent 50 years, below the banner of ‘one nation, two methods’.
Hong Kong’s Primary Regulation assured civic rights, together with freedoms of affiliation, peaceable meeting and expression. China dedicated to maneuver in the direction of common suffrage for the election of Hong Kong’s Chief Govt, the top of presidency.
However following the democracy protests that burst out in 2019, China has unilaterally torn up that settlement. Three years in the past, the federal government handed the Nationwide Safety Regulation, a sweeping piece of laws that criminalises criticism of the authorities. It’s been used alongside current legal guidelines, such because the regulation on sedition, to jail leaders of the democracy motion.
China by no means made good on its promise of common suffrage. It’s gone in the wrong way. Present Chief Govt John Lee – who as safety chief led the violent crackdown on democracy protests – was chosen final yr by a hand-picked 1,500-member Election Committee, which duly endorsed him as the only candidate.
The Legislative Council, Hong Kong’s parliament, had already been neutered. The variety of straight elected seats has been slashed and individuals are disqualified from standing in the event that they query China’s sovereignty over Hong Kong.
Now the District Councils are within the firing line. When the final elections for the municipal our bodies had been held, within the thick of democracy protests in November 2019, pro-democracy events triumphed.
Such a result’s now not possible. In 2021, a regulation was handed requiring all district councillors to swear an oath of allegiance affirming their ‘patriotism’ for China. A lot of the pro-democracy candidates elected in 2019 had been disqualified or resigned.
Now when new district councillors are chosen in November, solely 20 per cent of seats will probably be straight elected. The authorities will fill the remainder with their supporters, all vetted to make sure their ‘patriotism’. Little marvel that the Civic Occasion, one in all Hong Kong’s main pro-democracy events, not too long ago introduced it was closing down.
A hollowed-out Hong Kong
Hong Kong was as soon as a rustic the place folks felt protected to protest. It had a flourishing media and publishing trade. Now journalists are criminalised and key impartial media have shut down.
Civil society organisations and trade unions have done the same. The remaining organisations are scattered, practising self-censorship. Protests proceed to be heavily restricted: this yr a deliberate Worldwide Girls’s Day march was cancelled after police threats.
Individuals proceed to attempt to discover methods to specific dissent, however any small gesture can appeal to the state’s ire. The loss of life of Queen Elizabeth II gave people an opportunity to make use of public mourning to specific at with the regression since handover. However when a vigil was held through the Queen’s funeral, a harmonica participant was arrested for daring to play the tune Glory to Hong Kong, related to the democracy protests.
Final yr 5 speech therapists had been convicted of manufacturing ‘seditious publications’. Their crime was to supply kids’s books during which sheep defend their villages from wolves. This was taken to be an allegory of China’s management of Hong Kong.
On a regular basis repression is making Hong Kong a hollowed-out nation, its inhabitants falling. Some faculties face closure as a result of falling scholar numbers. Many have fled, not wanting their kids to develop up in a rustic the place schooling is indoctrination. The curriculum has been reworked to teach college students loyalty reasonably than impartial thought. Many academics are leaving the nation or taking early retirement.
With the authorized system dealing with growing interference and political stress, attorneys are additionally amongst these fleeing.
A key take a look at would be the trial of Jimmy Lai, former media proprietor and democracy campaigner. He’s already been found guilty on quite a few counts. His newspaper, Apple Each day, as soon as Hong Kong’s most generally learn pro-democracy paper, shut down in 2021. He faces trial below the Nationwide Safety Regulation, which may imply a life sentence.
The judges who will strive Lai have been handpicked by John Lee. In the meantime the authorities have tried to prevent Lai’s defence lawyer, UK barrister Tim Owen, representing him in courtroom. In March they passed a law giving Lee the ability to ban international attorneys engaged on nationwide safety circumstances. It isn’t wanting promising.
Lai is one in all Hong Kong’s 1,508 political prisoners. Even because the inhabitants shrinks, the imprisoned inhabitants simply retains getting larger. The candles that commemorate the Tiananmen Sq. Bloodbath and the craving for democracy will proceed to flare world wide in exile – however these lights are being extinguished in Hong Kong.
Andrew Firmin is CIVICUS Editor-in-Chief, co-director and author for CIVICUS Lens and co-author of the State of Civil Society Report.
Follow @IPSNewsUNBureau
Follow IPS News UN Bureau on Instagram
© Inter Press Service (2023) — All Rights ReservedOriginal source: Inter Press Service
LONDON, Jun 09 (IPS) – Nothing was extra predictable than repression. Merely for holding candles and flowers, folks had been taken away by Hong Kong’s police.
The event was the anniversary of the Tiananmen Sq. Bloodbath, 4 June 1989. Hong Kong was till not too long ago residence to mass annual vigils the place 1000’s gathered to maintain alive the reminiscence of that day. However that’s all gone now within the crackdown that adopted large-scale protests for democracy that erupted in 2019.
Hong Kong’s authorities are evidently decided to erase any type of acknowledgement that the bloodbath ever occurred. Memorials and artworks commemorating it have been removed. Books that point out the tragedy have disappeared from libraries. Retailers promoting the LED candles generally used to mark the event had been visited by the authorities within the run as much as this yr’s anniversary.
The organisation behind the vigil, the Hong Kong Alliance in Assist of Patriotic Actions in China, closed itself down in 2021 following a police investigation. A number of of its leaders had been jailed in March.
As a substitute of internet hosting the standard vigil, this yr Hong Kong’s Victoria Park was residence to a carnival celebrating Chinese language rule. Individuals eager to mark the event had to take action in non-public.
That is solely the tip of the iceberg. Persons are mourning not solely the numerous who died on 4 June 1989 but in addition the Hong Kong vanishing earlier than their eyes.
Additional than ever away from democracy
When Hong Kong was handed over to China by the UK in 1997, China agreed to keep up the nation’s distinct political and financial buildings for the subsequent 50 years, below the banner of ‘one nation, two methods’.
Hong Kong’s Primary Regulation assured civic rights, together with freedoms of affiliation, peaceable meeting and expression. China dedicated to maneuver in the direction of common suffrage for the election of Hong Kong’s Chief Govt, the top of presidency.
However following the democracy protests that burst out in 2019, China has unilaterally torn up that settlement. Three years in the past, the federal government handed the Nationwide Safety Regulation, a sweeping piece of laws that criminalises criticism of the authorities. It’s been used alongside current legal guidelines, such because the regulation on sedition, to jail leaders of the democracy motion.
China by no means made good on its promise of common suffrage. It’s gone in the wrong way. Present Chief Govt John Lee – who as safety chief led the violent crackdown on democracy protests – was chosen final yr by a hand-picked 1,500-member Election Committee, which duly endorsed him as the only candidate.
The Legislative Council, Hong Kong’s parliament, had already been neutered. The variety of straight elected seats has been slashed and individuals are disqualified from standing in the event that they query China’s sovereignty over Hong Kong.
Now the District Councils are within the firing line. When the final elections for the municipal our bodies had been held, within the thick of democracy protests in November 2019, pro-democracy events triumphed.
Such a result’s now not possible. In 2021, a regulation was handed requiring all district councillors to swear an oath of allegiance affirming their ‘patriotism’ for China. A lot of the pro-democracy candidates elected in 2019 had been disqualified or resigned.
Now when new district councillors are chosen in November, solely 20 per cent of seats will probably be straight elected. The authorities will fill the remainder with their supporters, all vetted to make sure their ‘patriotism’. Little marvel that the Civic Occasion, one in all Hong Kong’s main pro-democracy events, not too long ago introduced it was closing down.
A hollowed-out Hong Kong
Hong Kong was as soon as a rustic the place folks felt protected to protest. It had a flourishing media and publishing trade. Now journalists are criminalised and key impartial media have shut down.
Civil society organisations and trade unions have done the same. The remaining organisations are scattered, practising self-censorship. Protests proceed to be heavily restricted: this yr a deliberate Worldwide Girls’s Day march was cancelled after police threats.
Individuals proceed to attempt to discover methods to specific dissent, however any small gesture can appeal to the state’s ire. The loss of life of Queen Elizabeth II gave people an opportunity to make use of public mourning to specific at with the regression since handover. However when a vigil was held through the Queen’s funeral, a harmonica participant was arrested for daring to play the tune Glory to Hong Kong, related to the democracy protests.
Final yr 5 speech therapists had been convicted of manufacturing ‘seditious publications’. Their crime was to supply kids’s books during which sheep defend their villages from wolves. This was taken to be an allegory of China’s management of Hong Kong.
On a regular basis repression is making Hong Kong a hollowed-out nation, its inhabitants falling. Some faculties face closure as a result of falling scholar numbers. Many have fled, not wanting their kids to develop up in a rustic the place schooling is indoctrination. The curriculum has been reworked to teach college students loyalty reasonably than impartial thought. Many academics are leaving the nation or taking early retirement.
With the authorized system dealing with growing interference and political stress, attorneys are additionally amongst these fleeing.
A key take a look at would be the trial of Jimmy Lai, former media proprietor and democracy campaigner. He’s already been found guilty on quite a few counts. His newspaper, Apple Each day, as soon as Hong Kong’s most generally learn pro-democracy paper, shut down in 2021. He faces trial below the Nationwide Safety Regulation, which may imply a life sentence.
The judges who will strive Lai have been handpicked by John Lee. In the meantime the authorities have tried to prevent Lai’s defence lawyer, UK barrister Tim Owen, representing him in courtroom. In March they passed a law giving Lee the ability to ban international attorneys engaged on nationwide safety circumstances. It isn’t wanting promising.
Lai is one in all Hong Kong’s 1,508 political prisoners. Even because the inhabitants shrinks, the imprisoned inhabitants simply retains getting larger. The candles that commemorate the Tiananmen Sq. Bloodbath and the craving for democracy will proceed to flare world wide in exile – however these lights are being extinguished in Hong Kong.
Andrew Firmin is CIVICUS Editor-in-Chief, co-director and author for CIVICUS Lens and co-author of the State of Civil Society Report.
Follow @IPSNewsUNBureau
Follow IPS News UN Bureau on Instagram
© Inter Press Service (2023) — All Rights ReservedOriginal source: Inter Press Service
LONDON, Jun 09 (IPS) – Nothing was extra predictable than repression. Merely for holding candles and flowers, folks had been taken away by Hong Kong’s police.
The event was the anniversary of the Tiananmen Sq. Bloodbath, 4 June 1989. Hong Kong was till not too long ago residence to mass annual vigils the place 1000’s gathered to maintain alive the reminiscence of that day. However that’s all gone now within the crackdown that adopted large-scale protests for democracy that erupted in 2019.
Hong Kong’s authorities are evidently decided to erase any type of acknowledgement that the bloodbath ever occurred. Memorials and artworks commemorating it have been removed. Books that point out the tragedy have disappeared from libraries. Retailers promoting the LED candles generally used to mark the event had been visited by the authorities within the run as much as this yr’s anniversary.
The organisation behind the vigil, the Hong Kong Alliance in Assist of Patriotic Actions in China, closed itself down in 2021 following a police investigation. A number of of its leaders had been jailed in March.
As a substitute of internet hosting the standard vigil, this yr Hong Kong’s Victoria Park was residence to a carnival celebrating Chinese language rule. Individuals eager to mark the event had to take action in non-public.
That is solely the tip of the iceberg. Persons are mourning not solely the numerous who died on 4 June 1989 but in addition the Hong Kong vanishing earlier than their eyes.
Additional than ever away from democracy
When Hong Kong was handed over to China by the UK in 1997, China agreed to keep up the nation’s distinct political and financial buildings for the subsequent 50 years, below the banner of ‘one nation, two methods’.
Hong Kong’s Primary Regulation assured civic rights, together with freedoms of affiliation, peaceable meeting and expression. China dedicated to maneuver in the direction of common suffrage for the election of Hong Kong’s Chief Govt, the top of presidency.
However following the democracy protests that burst out in 2019, China has unilaterally torn up that settlement. Three years in the past, the federal government handed the Nationwide Safety Regulation, a sweeping piece of laws that criminalises criticism of the authorities. It’s been used alongside current legal guidelines, such because the regulation on sedition, to jail leaders of the democracy motion.
China by no means made good on its promise of common suffrage. It’s gone in the wrong way. Present Chief Govt John Lee – who as safety chief led the violent crackdown on democracy protests – was chosen final yr by a hand-picked 1,500-member Election Committee, which duly endorsed him as the only candidate.
The Legislative Council, Hong Kong’s parliament, had already been neutered. The variety of straight elected seats has been slashed and individuals are disqualified from standing in the event that they query China’s sovereignty over Hong Kong.
Now the District Councils are within the firing line. When the final elections for the municipal our bodies had been held, within the thick of democracy protests in November 2019, pro-democracy events triumphed.
Such a result’s now not possible. In 2021, a regulation was handed requiring all district councillors to swear an oath of allegiance affirming their ‘patriotism’ for China. A lot of the pro-democracy candidates elected in 2019 had been disqualified or resigned.
Now when new district councillors are chosen in November, solely 20 per cent of seats will probably be straight elected. The authorities will fill the remainder with their supporters, all vetted to make sure their ‘patriotism’. Little marvel that the Civic Occasion, one in all Hong Kong’s main pro-democracy events, not too long ago introduced it was closing down.
A hollowed-out Hong Kong
Hong Kong was as soon as a rustic the place folks felt protected to protest. It had a flourishing media and publishing trade. Now journalists are criminalised and key impartial media have shut down.
Civil society organisations and trade unions have done the same. The remaining organisations are scattered, practising self-censorship. Protests proceed to be heavily restricted: this yr a deliberate Worldwide Girls’s Day march was cancelled after police threats.
Individuals proceed to attempt to discover methods to specific dissent, however any small gesture can appeal to the state’s ire. The loss of life of Queen Elizabeth II gave people an opportunity to make use of public mourning to specific at with the regression since handover. However when a vigil was held through the Queen’s funeral, a harmonica participant was arrested for daring to play the tune Glory to Hong Kong, related to the democracy protests.
Final yr 5 speech therapists had been convicted of manufacturing ‘seditious publications’. Their crime was to supply kids’s books during which sheep defend their villages from wolves. This was taken to be an allegory of China’s management of Hong Kong.
On a regular basis repression is making Hong Kong a hollowed-out nation, its inhabitants falling. Some faculties face closure as a result of falling scholar numbers. Many have fled, not wanting their kids to develop up in a rustic the place schooling is indoctrination. The curriculum has been reworked to teach college students loyalty reasonably than impartial thought. Many academics are leaving the nation or taking early retirement.
With the authorized system dealing with growing interference and political stress, attorneys are additionally amongst these fleeing.
A key take a look at would be the trial of Jimmy Lai, former media proprietor and democracy campaigner. He’s already been found guilty on quite a few counts. His newspaper, Apple Each day, as soon as Hong Kong’s most generally learn pro-democracy paper, shut down in 2021. He faces trial below the Nationwide Safety Regulation, which may imply a life sentence.
The judges who will strive Lai have been handpicked by John Lee. In the meantime the authorities have tried to prevent Lai’s defence lawyer, UK barrister Tim Owen, representing him in courtroom. In March they passed a law giving Lee the ability to ban international attorneys engaged on nationwide safety circumstances. It isn’t wanting promising.
Lai is one in all Hong Kong’s 1,508 political prisoners. Even because the inhabitants shrinks, the imprisoned inhabitants simply retains getting larger. The candles that commemorate the Tiananmen Sq. Bloodbath and the craving for democracy will proceed to flare world wide in exile – however these lights are being extinguished in Hong Kong.
Andrew Firmin is CIVICUS Editor-in-Chief, co-director and author for CIVICUS Lens and co-author of the State of Civil Society Report.
Follow @IPSNewsUNBureau
Follow IPS News UN Bureau on Instagram
© Inter Press Service (2023) — All Rights ReservedOriginal source: Inter Press Service
LONDON, Jun 09 (IPS) – Nothing was extra predictable than repression. Merely for holding candles and flowers, folks had been taken away by Hong Kong’s police.
The event was the anniversary of the Tiananmen Sq. Bloodbath, 4 June 1989. Hong Kong was till not too long ago residence to mass annual vigils the place 1000’s gathered to maintain alive the reminiscence of that day. However that’s all gone now within the crackdown that adopted large-scale protests for democracy that erupted in 2019.
Hong Kong’s authorities are evidently decided to erase any type of acknowledgement that the bloodbath ever occurred. Memorials and artworks commemorating it have been removed. Books that point out the tragedy have disappeared from libraries. Retailers promoting the LED candles generally used to mark the event had been visited by the authorities within the run as much as this yr’s anniversary.
The organisation behind the vigil, the Hong Kong Alliance in Assist of Patriotic Actions in China, closed itself down in 2021 following a police investigation. A number of of its leaders had been jailed in March.
As a substitute of internet hosting the standard vigil, this yr Hong Kong’s Victoria Park was residence to a carnival celebrating Chinese language rule. Individuals eager to mark the event had to take action in non-public.
That is solely the tip of the iceberg. Persons are mourning not solely the numerous who died on 4 June 1989 but in addition the Hong Kong vanishing earlier than their eyes.
Additional than ever away from democracy
When Hong Kong was handed over to China by the UK in 1997, China agreed to keep up the nation’s distinct political and financial buildings for the subsequent 50 years, below the banner of ‘one nation, two methods’.
Hong Kong’s Primary Regulation assured civic rights, together with freedoms of affiliation, peaceable meeting and expression. China dedicated to maneuver in the direction of common suffrage for the election of Hong Kong’s Chief Govt, the top of presidency.
However following the democracy protests that burst out in 2019, China has unilaterally torn up that settlement. Three years in the past, the federal government handed the Nationwide Safety Regulation, a sweeping piece of laws that criminalises criticism of the authorities. It’s been used alongside current legal guidelines, such because the regulation on sedition, to jail leaders of the democracy motion.
China by no means made good on its promise of common suffrage. It’s gone in the wrong way. Present Chief Govt John Lee – who as safety chief led the violent crackdown on democracy protests – was chosen final yr by a hand-picked 1,500-member Election Committee, which duly endorsed him as the only candidate.
The Legislative Council, Hong Kong’s parliament, had already been neutered. The variety of straight elected seats has been slashed and individuals are disqualified from standing in the event that they query China’s sovereignty over Hong Kong.
Now the District Councils are within the firing line. When the final elections for the municipal our bodies had been held, within the thick of democracy protests in November 2019, pro-democracy events triumphed.
Such a result’s now not possible. In 2021, a regulation was handed requiring all district councillors to swear an oath of allegiance affirming their ‘patriotism’ for China. A lot of the pro-democracy candidates elected in 2019 had been disqualified or resigned.
Now when new district councillors are chosen in November, solely 20 per cent of seats will probably be straight elected. The authorities will fill the remainder with their supporters, all vetted to make sure their ‘patriotism’. Little marvel that the Civic Occasion, one in all Hong Kong’s main pro-democracy events, not too long ago introduced it was closing down.
A hollowed-out Hong Kong
Hong Kong was as soon as a rustic the place folks felt protected to protest. It had a flourishing media and publishing trade. Now journalists are criminalised and key impartial media have shut down.
Civil society organisations and trade unions have done the same. The remaining organisations are scattered, practising self-censorship. Protests proceed to be heavily restricted: this yr a deliberate Worldwide Girls’s Day march was cancelled after police threats.
Individuals proceed to attempt to discover methods to specific dissent, however any small gesture can appeal to the state’s ire. The loss of life of Queen Elizabeth II gave people an opportunity to make use of public mourning to specific at with the regression since handover. However when a vigil was held through the Queen’s funeral, a harmonica participant was arrested for daring to play the tune Glory to Hong Kong, related to the democracy protests.
Final yr 5 speech therapists had been convicted of manufacturing ‘seditious publications’. Their crime was to supply kids’s books during which sheep defend their villages from wolves. This was taken to be an allegory of China’s management of Hong Kong.
On a regular basis repression is making Hong Kong a hollowed-out nation, its inhabitants falling. Some faculties face closure as a result of falling scholar numbers. Many have fled, not wanting their kids to develop up in a rustic the place schooling is indoctrination. The curriculum has been reworked to teach college students loyalty reasonably than impartial thought. Many academics are leaving the nation or taking early retirement.
With the authorized system dealing with growing interference and political stress, attorneys are additionally amongst these fleeing.
A key take a look at would be the trial of Jimmy Lai, former media proprietor and democracy campaigner. He’s already been found guilty on quite a few counts. His newspaper, Apple Each day, as soon as Hong Kong’s most generally learn pro-democracy paper, shut down in 2021. He faces trial below the Nationwide Safety Regulation, which may imply a life sentence.
The judges who will strive Lai have been handpicked by John Lee. In the meantime the authorities have tried to prevent Lai’s defence lawyer, UK barrister Tim Owen, representing him in courtroom. In March they passed a law giving Lee the ability to ban international attorneys engaged on nationwide safety circumstances. It isn’t wanting promising.
Lai is one in all Hong Kong’s 1,508 political prisoners. Even because the inhabitants shrinks, the imprisoned inhabitants simply retains getting larger. The candles that commemorate the Tiananmen Sq. Bloodbath and the craving for democracy will proceed to flare world wide in exile – however these lights are being extinguished in Hong Kong.
Andrew Firmin is CIVICUS Editor-in-Chief, co-director and author for CIVICUS Lens and co-author of the State of Civil Society Report.
Follow @IPSNewsUNBureau
Follow IPS News UN Bureau on Instagram
© Inter Press Service (2023) — All Rights ReservedOriginal source: Inter Press Service
LONDON, Jun 09 (IPS) – Nothing was extra predictable than repression. Merely for holding candles and flowers, folks had been taken away by Hong Kong’s police.
The event was the anniversary of the Tiananmen Sq. Bloodbath, 4 June 1989. Hong Kong was till not too long ago residence to mass annual vigils the place 1000’s gathered to maintain alive the reminiscence of that day. However that’s all gone now within the crackdown that adopted large-scale protests for democracy that erupted in 2019.
Hong Kong’s authorities are evidently decided to erase any type of acknowledgement that the bloodbath ever occurred. Memorials and artworks commemorating it have been removed. Books that point out the tragedy have disappeared from libraries. Retailers promoting the LED candles generally used to mark the event had been visited by the authorities within the run as much as this yr’s anniversary.
The organisation behind the vigil, the Hong Kong Alliance in Assist of Patriotic Actions in China, closed itself down in 2021 following a police investigation. A number of of its leaders had been jailed in March.
As a substitute of internet hosting the standard vigil, this yr Hong Kong’s Victoria Park was residence to a carnival celebrating Chinese language rule. Individuals eager to mark the event had to take action in non-public.
That is solely the tip of the iceberg. Persons are mourning not solely the numerous who died on 4 June 1989 but in addition the Hong Kong vanishing earlier than their eyes.
Additional than ever away from democracy
When Hong Kong was handed over to China by the UK in 1997, China agreed to keep up the nation’s distinct political and financial buildings for the subsequent 50 years, below the banner of ‘one nation, two methods’.
Hong Kong’s Primary Regulation assured civic rights, together with freedoms of affiliation, peaceable meeting and expression. China dedicated to maneuver in the direction of common suffrage for the election of Hong Kong’s Chief Govt, the top of presidency.
However following the democracy protests that burst out in 2019, China has unilaterally torn up that settlement. Three years in the past, the federal government handed the Nationwide Safety Regulation, a sweeping piece of laws that criminalises criticism of the authorities. It’s been used alongside current legal guidelines, such because the regulation on sedition, to jail leaders of the democracy motion.
China by no means made good on its promise of common suffrage. It’s gone in the wrong way. Present Chief Govt John Lee – who as safety chief led the violent crackdown on democracy protests – was chosen final yr by a hand-picked 1,500-member Election Committee, which duly endorsed him as the only candidate.
The Legislative Council, Hong Kong’s parliament, had already been neutered. The variety of straight elected seats has been slashed and individuals are disqualified from standing in the event that they query China’s sovereignty over Hong Kong.
Now the District Councils are within the firing line. When the final elections for the municipal our bodies had been held, within the thick of democracy protests in November 2019, pro-democracy events triumphed.
Such a result’s now not possible. In 2021, a regulation was handed requiring all district councillors to swear an oath of allegiance affirming their ‘patriotism’ for China. A lot of the pro-democracy candidates elected in 2019 had been disqualified or resigned.
Now when new district councillors are chosen in November, solely 20 per cent of seats will probably be straight elected. The authorities will fill the remainder with their supporters, all vetted to make sure their ‘patriotism’. Little marvel that the Civic Occasion, one in all Hong Kong’s main pro-democracy events, not too long ago introduced it was closing down.
A hollowed-out Hong Kong
Hong Kong was as soon as a rustic the place folks felt protected to protest. It had a flourishing media and publishing trade. Now journalists are criminalised and key impartial media have shut down.
Civil society organisations and trade unions have done the same. The remaining organisations are scattered, practising self-censorship. Protests proceed to be heavily restricted: this yr a deliberate Worldwide Girls’s Day march was cancelled after police threats.
Individuals proceed to attempt to discover methods to specific dissent, however any small gesture can appeal to the state’s ire. The loss of life of Queen Elizabeth II gave people an opportunity to make use of public mourning to specific at with the regression since handover. However when a vigil was held through the Queen’s funeral, a harmonica participant was arrested for daring to play the tune Glory to Hong Kong, related to the democracy protests.
Final yr 5 speech therapists had been convicted of manufacturing ‘seditious publications’. Their crime was to supply kids’s books during which sheep defend their villages from wolves. This was taken to be an allegory of China’s management of Hong Kong.
On a regular basis repression is making Hong Kong a hollowed-out nation, its inhabitants falling. Some faculties face closure as a result of falling scholar numbers. Many have fled, not wanting their kids to develop up in a rustic the place schooling is indoctrination. The curriculum has been reworked to teach college students loyalty reasonably than impartial thought. Many academics are leaving the nation or taking early retirement.
With the authorized system dealing with growing interference and political stress, attorneys are additionally amongst these fleeing.
A key take a look at would be the trial of Jimmy Lai, former media proprietor and democracy campaigner. He’s already been found guilty on quite a few counts. His newspaper, Apple Each day, as soon as Hong Kong’s most generally learn pro-democracy paper, shut down in 2021. He faces trial below the Nationwide Safety Regulation, which may imply a life sentence.
The judges who will strive Lai have been handpicked by John Lee. In the meantime the authorities have tried to prevent Lai’s defence lawyer, UK barrister Tim Owen, representing him in courtroom. In March they passed a law giving Lee the ability to ban international attorneys engaged on nationwide safety circumstances. It isn’t wanting promising.
Lai is one in all Hong Kong’s 1,508 political prisoners. Even because the inhabitants shrinks, the imprisoned inhabitants simply retains getting larger. The candles that commemorate the Tiananmen Sq. Bloodbath and the craving for democracy will proceed to flare world wide in exile – however these lights are being extinguished in Hong Kong.
Andrew Firmin is CIVICUS Editor-in-Chief, co-director and author for CIVICUS Lens and co-author of the State of Civil Society Report.
Follow @IPSNewsUNBureau
Follow IPS News UN Bureau on Instagram
© Inter Press Service (2023) — All Rights ReservedOriginal source: Inter Press Service
LONDON, Jun 09 (IPS) – Nothing was extra predictable than repression. Merely for holding candles and flowers, folks had been taken away by Hong Kong’s police.
The event was the anniversary of the Tiananmen Sq. Bloodbath, 4 June 1989. Hong Kong was till not too long ago residence to mass annual vigils the place 1000’s gathered to maintain alive the reminiscence of that day. However that’s all gone now within the crackdown that adopted large-scale protests for democracy that erupted in 2019.
Hong Kong’s authorities are evidently decided to erase any type of acknowledgement that the bloodbath ever occurred. Memorials and artworks commemorating it have been removed. Books that point out the tragedy have disappeared from libraries. Retailers promoting the LED candles generally used to mark the event had been visited by the authorities within the run as much as this yr’s anniversary.
The organisation behind the vigil, the Hong Kong Alliance in Assist of Patriotic Actions in China, closed itself down in 2021 following a police investigation. A number of of its leaders had been jailed in March.
As a substitute of internet hosting the standard vigil, this yr Hong Kong’s Victoria Park was residence to a carnival celebrating Chinese language rule. Individuals eager to mark the event had to take action in non-public.
That is solely the tip of the iceberg. Persons are mourning not solely the numerous who died on 4 June 1989 but in addition the Hong Kong vanishing earlier than their eyes.
Additional than ever away from democracy
When Hong Kong was handed over to China by the UK in 1997, China agreed to keep up the nation’s distinct political and financial buildings for the subsequent 50 years, below the banner of ‘one nation, two methods’.
Hong Kong’s Primary Regulation assured civic rights, together with freedoms of affiliation, peaceable meeting and expression. China dedicated to maneuver in the direction of common suffrage for the election of Hong Kong’s Chief Govt, the top of presidency.
However following the democracy protests that burst out in 2019, China has unilaterally torn up that settlement. Three years in the past, the federal government handed the Nationwide Safety Regulation, a sweeping piece of laws that criminalises criticism of the authorities. It’s been used alongside current legal guidelines, such because the regulation on sedition, to jail leaders of the democracy motion.
China by no means made good on its promise of common suffrage. It’s gone in the wrong way. Present Chief Govt John Lee – who as safety chief led the violent crackdown on democracy protests – was chosen final yr by a hand-picked 1,500-member Election Committee, which duly endorsed him as the only candidate.
The Legislative Council, Hong Kong’s parliament, had already been neutered. The variety of straight elected seats has been slashed and individuals are disqualified from standing in the event that they query China’s sovereignty over Hong Kong.
Now the District Councils are within the firing line. When the final elections for the municipal our bodies had been held, within the thick of democracy protests in November 2019, pro-democracy events triumphed.
Such a result’s now not possible. In 2021, a regulation was handed requiring all district councillors to swear an oath of allegiance affirming their ‘patriotism’ for China. A lot of the pro-democracy candidates elected in 2019 had been disqualified or resigned.
Now when new district councillors are chosen in November, solely 20 per cent of seats will probably be straight elected. The authorities will fill the remainder with their supporters, all vetted to make sure their ‘patriotism’. Little marvel that the Civic Occasion, one in all Hong Kong’s main pro-democracy events, not too long ago introduced it was closing down.
A hollowed-out Hong Kong
Hong Kong was as soon as a rustic the place folks felt protected to protest. It had a flourishing media and publishing trade. Now journalists are criminalised and key impartial media have shut down.
Civil society organisations and trade unions have done the same. The remaining organisations are scattered, practising self-censorship. Protests proceed to be heavily restricted: this yr a deliberate Worldwide Girls’s Day march was cancelled after police threats.
Individuals proceed to attempt to discover methods to specific dissent, however any small gesture can appeal to the state’s ire. The loss of life of Queen Elizabeth II gave people an opportunity to make use of public mourning to specific at with the regression since handover. However when a vigil was held through the Queen’s funeral, a harmonica participant was arrested for daring to play the tune Glory to Hong Kong, related to the democracy protests.
Final yr 5 speech therapists had been convicted of manufacturing ‘seditious publications’. Their crime was to supply kids’s books during which sheep defend their villages from wolves. This was taken to be an allegory of China’s management of Hong Kong.
On a regular basis repression is making Hong Kong a hollowed-out nation, its inhabitants falling. Some faculties face closure as a result of falling scholar numbers. Many have fled, not wanting their kids to develop up in a rustic the place schooling is indoctrination. The curriculum has been reworked to teach college students loyalty reasonably than impartial thought. Many academics are leaving the nation or taking early retirement.
With the authorized system dealing with growing interference and political stress, attorneys are additionally amongst these fleeing.
A key take a look at would be the trial of Jimmy Lai, former media proprietor and democracy campaigner. He’s already been found guilty on quite a few counts. His newspaper, Apple Each day, as soon as Hong Kong’s most generally learn pro-democracy paper, shut down in 2021. He faces trial below the Nationwide Safety Regulation, which may imply a life sentence.
The judges who will strive Lai have been handpicked by John Lee. In the meantime the authorities have tried to prevent Lai’s defence lawyer, UK barrister Tim Owen, representing him in courtroom. In March they passed a law giving Lee the ability to ban international attorneys engaged on nationwide safety circumstances. It isn’t wanting promising.
Lai is one in all Hong Kong’s 1,508 political prisoners. Even because the inhabitants shrinks, the imprisoned inhabitants simply retains getting larger. The candles that commemorate the Tiananmen Sq. Bloodbath and the craving for democracy will proceed to flare world wide in exile – however these lights are being extinguished in Hong Kong.
Andrew Firmin is CIVICUS Editor-in-Chief, co-director and author for CIVICUS Lens and co-author of the State of Civil Society Report.
Follow @IPSNewsUNBureau
Follow IPS News UN Bureau on Instagram
© Inter Press Service (2023) — All Rights ReservedOriginal source: Inter Press Service
LONDON, Jun 09 (IPS) – Nothing was extra predictable than repression. Merely for holding candles and flowers, folks had been taken away by Hong Kong’s police.
The event was the anniversary of the Tiananmen Sq. Bloodbath, 4 June 1989. Hong Kong was till not too long ago residence to mass annual vigils the place 1000’s gathered to maintain alive the reminiscence of that day. However that’s all gone now within the crackdown that adopted large-scale protests for democracy that erupted in 2019.
Hong Kong’s authorities are evidently decided to erase any type of acknowledgement that the bloodbath ever occurred. Memorials and artworks commemorating it have been removed. Books that point out the tragedy have disappeared from libraries. Retailers promoting the LED candles generally used to mark the event had been visited by the authorities within the run as much as this yr’s anniversary.
The organisation behind the vigil, the Hong Kong Alliance in Assist of Patriotic Actions in China, closed itself down in 2021 following a police investigation. A number of of its leaders had been jailed in March.
As a substitute of internet hosting the standard vigil, this yr Hong Kong’s Victoria Park was residence to a carnival celebrating Chinese language rule. Individuals eager to mark the event had to take action in non-public.
That is solely the tip of the iceberg. Persons are mourning not solely the numerous who died on 4 June 1989 but in addition the Hong Kong vanishing earlier than their eyes.
Additional than ever away from democracy
When Hong Kong was handed over to China by the UK in 1997, China agreed to keep up the nation’s distinct political and financial buildings for the subsequent 50 years, below the banner of ‘one nation, two methods’.
Hong Kong’s Primary Regulation assured civic rights, together with freedoms of affiliation, peaceable meeting and expression. China dedicated to maneuver in the direction of common suffrage for the election of Hong Kong’s Chief Govt, the top of presidency.
However following the democracy protests that burst out in 2019, China has unilaterally torn up that settlement. Three years in the past, the federal government handed the Nationwide Safety Regulation, a sweeping piece of laws that criminalises criticism of the authorities. It’s been used alongside current legal guidelines, such because the regulation on sedition, to jail leaders of the democracy motion.
China by no means made good on its promise of common suffrage. It’s gone in the wrong way. Present Chief Govt John Lee – who as safety chief led the violent crackdown on democracy protests – was chosen final yr by a hand-picked 1,500-member Election Committee, which duly endorsed him as the only candidate.
The Legislative Council, Hong Kong’s parliament, had already been neutered. The variety of straight elected seats has been slashed and individuals are disqualified from standing in the event that they query China’s sovereignty over Hong Kong.
Now the District Councils are within the firing line. When the final elections for the municipal our bodies had been held, within the thick of democracy protests in November 2019, pro-democracy events triumphed.
Such a result’s now not possible. In 2021, a regulation was handed requiring all district councillors to swear an oath of allegiance affirming their ‘patriotism’ for China. A lot of the pro-democracy candidates elected in 2019 had been disqualified or resigned.
Now when new district councillors are chosen in November, solely 20 per cent of seats will probably be straight elected. The authorities will fill the remainder with their supporters, all vetted to make sure their ‘patriotism’. Little marvel that the Civic Occasion, one in all Hong Kong’s main pro-democracy events, not too long ago introduced it was closing down.
A hollowed-out Hong Kong
Hong Kong was as soon as a rustic the place folks felt protected to protest. It had a flourishing media and publishing trade. Now journalists are criminalised and key impartial media have shut down.
Civil society organisations and trade unions have done the same. The remaining organisations are scattered, practising self-censorship. Protests proceed to be heavily restricted: this yr a deliberate Worldwide Girls’s Day march was cancelled after police threats.
Individuals proceed to attempt to discover methods to specific dissent, however any small gesture can appeal to the state’s ire. The loss of life of Queen Elizabeth II gave people an opportunity to make use of public mourning to specific at with the regression since handover. However when a vigil was held through the Queen’s funeral, a harmonica participant was arrested for daring to play the tune Glory to Hong Kong, related to the democracy protests.
Final yr 5 speech therapists had been convicted of manufacturing ‘seditious publications’. Their crime was to supply kids’s books during which sheep defend their villages from wolves. This was taken to be an allegory of China’s management of Hong Kong.
On a regular basis repression is making Hong Kong a hollowed-out nation, its inhabitants falling. Some faculties face closure as a result of falling scholar numbers. Many have fled, not wanting their kids to develop up in a rustic the place schooling is indoctrination. The curriculum has been reworked to teach college students loyalty reasonably than impartial thought. Many academics are leaving the nation or taking early retirement.
With the authorized system dealing with growing interference and political stress, attorneys are additionally amongst these fleeing.
A key take a look at would be the trial of Jimmy Lai, former media proprietor and democracy campaigner. He’s already been found guilty on quite a few counts. His newspaper, Apple Each day, as soon as Hong Kong’s most generally learn pro-democracy paper, shut down in 2021. He faces trial below the Nationwide Safety Regulation, which may imply a life sentence.
The judges who will strive Lai have been handpicked by John Lee. In the meantime the authorities have tried to prevent Lai’s defence lawyer, UK barrister Tim Owen, representing him in courtroom. In March they passed a law giving Lee the ability to ban international attorneys engaged on nationwide safety circumstances. It isn’t wanting promising.
Lai is one in all Hong Kong’s 1,508 political prisoners. Even because the inhabitants shrinks, the imprisoned inhabitants simply retains getting larger. The candles that commemorate the Tiananmen Sq. Bloodbath and the craving for democracy will proceed to flare world wide in exile – however these lights are being extinguished in Hong Kong.
Andrew Firmin is CIVICUS Editor-in-Chief, co-director and author for CIVICUS Lens and co-author of the State of Civil Society Report.
Follow @IPSNewsUNBureau
Follow IPS News UN Bureau on Instagram
© Inter Press Service (2023) — All Rights ReservedOriginal source: Inter Press Service
LONDON, Jun 09 (IPS) – Nothing was extra predictable than repression. Merely for holding candles and flowers, folks had been taken away by Hong Kong’s police.
The event was the anniversary of the Tiananmen Sq. Bloodbath, 4 June 1989. Hong Kong was till not too long ago residence to mass annual vigils the place 1000’s gathered to maintain alive the reminiscence of that day. However that’s all gone now within the crackdown that adopted large-scale protests for democracy that erupted in 2019.
Hong Kong’s authorities are evidently decided to erase any type of acknowledgement that the bloodbath ever occurred. Memorials and artworks commemorating it have been removed. Books that point out the tragedy have disappeared from libraries. Retailers promoting the LED candles generally used to mark the event had been visited by the authorities within the run as much as this yr’s anniversary.
The organisation behind the vigil, the Hong Kong Alliance in Assist of Patriotic Actions in China, closed itself down in 2021 following a police investigation. A number of of its leaders had been jailed in March.
As a substitute of internet hosting the standard vigil, this yr Hong Kong’s Victoria Park was residence to a carnival celebrating Chinese language rule. Individuals eager to mark the event had to take action in non-public.
That is solely the tip of the iceberg. Persons are mourning not solely the numerous who died on 4 June 1989 but in addition the Hong Kong vanishing earlier than their eyes.
Additional than ever away from democracy
When Hong Kong was handed over to China by the UK in 1997, China agreed to keep up the nation’s distinct political and financial buildings for the subsequent 50 years, below the banner of ‘one nation, two methods’.
Hong Kong’s Primary Regulation assured civic rights, together with freedoms of affiliation, peaceable meeting and expression. China dedicated to maneuver in the direction of common suffrage for the election of Hong Kong’s Chief Govt, the top of presidency.
However following the democracy protests that burst out in 2019, China has unilaterally torn up that settlement. Three years in the past, the federal government handed the Nationwide Safety Regulation, a sweeping piece of laws that criminalises criticism of the authorities. It’s been used alongside current legal guidelines, such because the regulation on sedition, to jail leaders of the democracy motion.
China by no means made good on its promise of common suffrage. It’s gone in the wrong way. Present Chief Govt John Lee – who as safety chief led the violent crackdown on democracy protests – was chosen final yr by a hand-picked 1,500-member Election Committee, which duly endorsed him as the only candidate.
The Legislative Council, Hong Kong’s parliament, had already been neutered. The variety of straight elected seats has been slashed and individuals are disqualified from standing in the event that they query China’s sovereignty over Hong Kong.
Now the District Councils are within the firing line. When the final elections for the municipal our bodies had been held, within the thick of democracy protests in November 2019, pro-democracy events triumphed.
Such a result’s now not possible. In 2021, a regulation was handed requiring all district councillors to swear an oath of allegiance affirming their ‘patriotism’ for China. A lot of the pro-democracy candidates elected in 2019 had been disqualified or resigned.
Now when new district councillors are chosen in November, solely 20 per cent of seats will probably be straight elected. The authorities will fill the remainder with their supporters, all vetted to make sure their ‘patriotism’. Little marvel that the Civic Occasion, one in all Hong Kong’s main pro-democracy events, not too long ago introduced it was closing down.
A hollowed-out Hong Kong
Hong Kong was as soon as a rustic the place folks felt protected to protest. It had a flourishing media and publishing trade. Now journalists are criminalised and key impartial media have shut down.
Civil society organisations and trade unions have done the same. The remaining organisations are scattered, practising self-censorship. Protests proceed to be heavily restricted: this yr a deliberate Worldwide Girls’s Day march was cancelled after police threats.
Individuals proceed to attempt to discover methods to specific dissent, however any small gesture can appeal to the state’s ire. The loss of life of Queen Elizabeth II gave people an opportunity to make use of public mourning to specific at with the regression since handover. However when a vigil was held through the Queen’s funeral, a harmonica participant was arrested for daring to play the tune Glory to Hong Kong, related to the democracy protests.
Final yr 5 speech therapists had been convicted of manufacturing ‘seditious publications’. Their crime was to supply kids’s books during which sheep defend their villages from wolves. This was taken to be an allegory of China’s management of Hong Kong.
On a regular basis repression is making Hong Kong a hollowed-out nation, its inhabitants falling. Some faculties face closure as a result of falling scholar numbers. Many have fled, not wanting their kids to develop up in a rustic the place schooling is indoctrination. The curriculum has been reworked to teach college students loyalty reasonably than impartial thought. Many academics are leaving the nation or taking early retirement.
With the authorized system dealing with growing interference and political stress, attorneys are additionally amongst these fleeing.
A key take a look at would be the trial of Jimmy Lai, former media proprietor and democracy campaigner. He’s already been found guilty on quite a few counts. His newspaper, Apple Each day, as soon as Hong Kong’s most generally learn pro-democracy paper, shut down in 2021. He faces trial below the Nationwide Safety Regulation, which may imply a life sentence.
The judges who will strive Lai have been handpicked by John Lee. In the meantime the authorities have tried to prevent Lai’s defence lawyer, UK barrister Tim Owen, representing him in courtroom. In March they passed a law giving Lee the ability to ban international attorneys engaged on nationwide safety circumstances. It isn’t wanting promising.
Lai is one in all Hong Kong’s 1,508 political prisoners. Even because the inhabitants shrinks, the imprisoned inhabitants simply retains getting larger. The candles that commemorate the Tiananmen Sq. Bloodbath and the craving for democracy will proceed to flare world wide in exile – however these lights are being extinguished in Hong Kong.
Andrew Firmin is CIVICUS Editor-in-Chief, co-director and author for CIVICUS Lens and co-author of the State of Civil Society Report.
Follow @IPSNewsUNBureau
Follow IPS News UN Bureau on Instagram
© Inter Press Service (2023) — All Rights ReservedOriginal source: Inter Press Service