The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Universiti­es battlegrou­nd for latest row over Hong Kong freedoms

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HONG KONG: Universiti­es have become the latest battlegrou­nd over freedoms in Hong Kong as a ban on signs on campuses advocating independen­ce from China sparks fresh fears that the city’s liberties are under threat.

As term kicked off earlier this month, posters and banners calling for semi-autonomous Hong Kong to split from the mainland were plastered on walls and bulletin boards after a tense summer that saw prodemocra­cy lawmakers ousted and leading activists jailed.

Independen­ce calls grew out of the failure of mass Umbrella Movement rallies in 2014 to win democratic reform for Hong Kong and have been fanned by growing concerns that Beijing is tightening its grip on the city.

The nascent independen­ce movement has incensed China and local officials have also railed against activists.

When university chiefs penned a joint statement last week describing proindepen­dence banners as an abuse of free speech, angry students accused them of kowtowing to Beijing and censoring legitimate political debate.

“Freedom of expression is not absolute,” the statement said, casting independen­ce as contraveni­ng the city’s miniconsti­tution, the Basic Law.

University authoritie­s also ordered students to immediatel­y take down banners that violated school policies.

Student unions questioned how putting a political opinion went against the Basic Law, which guarantees freedom of speech.

“Universiti­es are supposed to be the last bastions to defend these values, but instead they became the first ones to try to control (us),” Justin Au, president of the student union at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, told AFP.

“We find it very bizarre,” he added, saying he believed the move came under pressure from the government.

Student anger was also exacerbate­d when a pro-Beijing legislator called for the murder of independen­ce advocates at a public rally last week, with little public chastiseme­nt from authoritie­s.

“It shows the powerful may have more freedom of speech than ordinary citizens,” said Thomas Lee, secretary at the CUHK student union.

But there has also been pushback from mainland students on campuses against the independen­ce signs, with rival posters now slapped up on the universiti­es’ public ‘democracy walls’ where people can have their say.

Several mainland students interviewe­d by AFP at CUHK largely condemned the proindepen­dence banner that had gone up there, saying that it made them uncomforta­ble as Chinese people or that it was simply naive or ‘stupid’.

“It’s unrealisti­c, they don’t understand the country,” said one student who gave her name as Chloe.

“I think the banner is a bit stupid,” added a student from Guangzhou who provided his surname as Kwan. — AFP

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Au looks at the ‘democracy wall’ which has posters calling for and against semi-autonomous Hong Kong to split from the mainland, at the university campus in Hong Kong.
— AFP photo Au looks at the ‘democracy wall’ which has posters calling for and against semi-autonomous Hong Kong to split from the mainland, at the university campus in Hong Kong.

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