Bangkok Post

Liberate Hong Kong slogan ‘illegal’

Mainland’s security law fuels more fears

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HONG KONG: The popular protest slogan “Liberate Hong Kong, revolution of our times” connotes separatism or subversion, the city’s government said, pointing to crimes that are covered under the new national security law imposed by Beijing.

The rallying cry appears on placards at rallies, is printed on clothes and accessorie­s and scribbled on post-it notes on walls across the Chineserul­ed city.

The government statement on the slogan will exacerbate fears about an abrupt crushing of the global finance hub’s freedoms.

Raising further alarm that freedom of speech in Hong Kong will be trampled, the official Xinhua news agency said a Communist cadre who became prominent during a 2011 clampdown on protesters in a southern Chinese village will head the new national security office created in Hong Kong under the new law.

Zheng Yanxiong, 57, most recently served as the secretary-general of the Communist Party committee of Guangdong province, an economic powerhouse bordering Hong Kong.

Videos leaked from an internal government meeting in 2011 showed Mr Zheng calling foreign media “rotten”.

Under the security legislatio­n, the new agency in Hong Kong can take enforcemen­t action beyond pre-existing local laws in the most serious cases.

The legislatio­n allows agents to take suspects across the border for trials in communist-controlled courts and specifies special privileges for the agents, including that local authoritie­s cannot inspect their vehicles.

“The slogan “Liberate Hong Kong, the revolution of our times” nowadays connotes “Hong Kong independen­ce”, or separating the Hong Kong Special

Administra­tive Region (HKSAR) from the People’s Republic of China, altering the legal status of the HKSAR, or subverting the state power,” the government said in a statement.

It was unclear whether independen­t courts would uphold the government’s view on the slogan.

In one tweet on the subject, public broadcaste­r RTHK censored the wording as “L ******* #HongKong.”

One Twitter user ridiculed it, replying “People L ********* Army,” in a reference to the Chinese army, which has a garrison in the city.

The government has repeatedly said the security law won’t affect freedom of speech, of the media, and other rights in the city which are not seen in mainland China.

On Wednesday, the 23rd anniversar­y of Hong Kong’s return to Chinese rule, police arrested about 370 people during protests over the legislatio­n, with 10 of those involving violations of the new law.

China’s parliament adopted the security law, dubbed in state media as “the second return”, in response to protests last year triggered by fears Beijing was stifling the city’s freedoms and threatenin­g its judicial independen­ce, guaranteed by a “one country, two systems” formula agreed when it returned to China.

Beijing denies the accusation. The law has triggered alarm among democracy activists and rights groups, as well as lawyers, business leaders and Western government­s.

 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? A man wipes a glass door after removing notes supporting the pro-democracy movement at a restaurant at Causeway Bay, Hong Kong on Thursday.
BLOOMBERG A man wipes a glass door after removing notes supporting the pro-democracy movement at a restaurant at Causeway Bay, Hong Kong on Thursday.
 ?? AFP ?? A protester places bricks that were dug up from a nearby pavement onto a road during a rally against a new national security law in Hong Kong on the 23rd anniversar­y of the city’s handover from Britain to China on Wednesday.
AFP A protester places bricks that were dug up from a nearby pavement onto a road during a rally against a new national security law in Hong Kong on the 23rd anniversar­y of the city’s handover from Britain to China on Wednesday.

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