Bangkok Post

Lam vows to overhaul HK’s education

Pro-Beijing leader slams ‘liberal studies’

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HONG KONG: The pro-Beijing leader of Hong Kong yesterday vowed to overhaul the city’s education system, arguing its liberal studies curriculum helped fuel last year’s violent prodemocra­cy protests.

Chief Executive Carrie Lam described the current secondary school programme as a “chicken coop without a roof ” and said her government would soon unveil their plans.

“In terms of handling the subject of liberal studies in the future, we will definitely make things clear to the public within this year,” she told the pro-government Ta Kung Pao newspaper in an interview published yesterday.

Her comments are likely to inflame those Hong Kongers who fear Beijing is chipping away at the freedoms that make the city a major internatio­nal draw as political tensions rise once more.

With the backing of Beijing, Hong Kong’s government is pushing ahead with a bill that outlaws insulting China’s national anthem and leading proestabli­shment figures are lobbying for an anti-sedition law.

The government says new legislatio­n is needed to curb snowballin­g support — especially among younger Hong Kongers — for democracy and greater autonomy from China.

Opponents say the laws will cut back on free speech and do little to heal the city’s festering divides.

Hong Kong has some of Asia’s best schools and universiti­es with academic freedoms unseen in mainland China.

Liberal studies was introduced in 2009 as a way to foster critical thinking with schools allowed to choose how they teach it.

But it has become a bete noire for Chinese state media and pro-Beijing politician­s who have called for more patriotic education.

In yesterday’s interview, Ms Lam said she felt the classes allowed teachers to push their political biases and that greater oversight by the government was now needed.

Hong Kong was convulsed by seven straight months of often-violent youthled pro-democracy protests last year, with millions hitting the streets.

More than 8,000 people have been arrested — around 17% of them secondary school students.

The mass arrests and the coronaviru­s pandemic ushered in a period of enforced calm.

But with the finance hub successful­ly tackling its Covid-19 outbreak — and social distancing measures easing — small protests have bubbled up.

On Sunday, riot police chased flashmob protesters through multiple shopping malls.

They later used pepper spray and batons against protesters, bystanders and journalist­s in the district of Mong Kok.

Police said 230 people were arrested throughout the day, aged between 12 and 65.

“Police condemn protesters for disregardi­ng the Government’s disease prevention and control measures, and participat­ing in or organising prohibited group gatherings,” the force said in a statement yesterday.

Ms Lam has resisted calls for universal suffrage or an independen­t inquiry into the police’s handling of the protests.

During the New Year, she vowed to heal the divisions coursing through Hong Kong, but her administra­tion has offered little in the way of reconcilia­tion or a political solution.

Arrests and prosecutio­ns have continued apace, while Beijing’s offices in the city sparked a constituti­onal row last month by announcing a greater say in how Hong Kong is run.

 ??  ?? Police detain a group of people during a pro-democracy protest calling for the city’s independen­ce in Hong Kong on Sunday.
Police detain a group of people during a pro-democracy protest calling for the city’s independen­ce in Hong Kong on Sunday.

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