The Sunday Telegraph

Blank notes on Lennon Wall keep up freedom fight

Hong Kong protesters get around curbs on dissent with bold anthem sung with numbers, not words

- By Jasmine Leung in Hong Kong

EVER since Hong Kong’s protest movement erupted last year, young people have flocked to Leung’s bubble tea house in the busy shopping district of Mong Kok to leave messages of support for democracy on the so-called “Lennon Wall” inside the shop.

They used to write “Liberate Hong Kong”, “One Hong Kong, One Nation”, or “Hong Kong People, Resist” on a Post-it note, stick it on the wall as they enjoyed a fresh tapioca pearl tea, and then disappear into the night.

Today Post-its still cover the wall. But after Beijing imposed a sweeping national security law that threatens life in prison for an ill-defined range of crimes, including secession, terrorism and collusion with foreign forces, all the colourful squares of paper have been left blank. “The Post-its represent our continuous support to the movement, and we let customers use their imaginatio­n to fill in the words,” said 23-year-old Leung, picking out toppings for the next drink.

The ruling Chinese Communist Party hopes that its draconian law will crush the pro-democracy movement that saw millions of people take to the streets last year. Critics say the law effectivel­y ends the unique freedoms granted to Hong Kong under the “one country, two systems” agreement signed before the territory was returned to China by Britain.

Yesterday, however, tens of thousands signalled they had not given up hope by turning out to vote in primary polls for pro-democracy candidates in the forthcomin­g election to Hong Kong’s legislativ­e council, the heavily Beijing-influenced body that oversees the city. They queued for hours despite warnings that the unofficial vote itself might be in breach of the new security law – and chilling news of a police raid on an opinion pollster helping to conduct the ballot. While some hold out slim hope for electoral success, daring young men and women are trying to keep the protest movement alive – walking an increasing­ly uncertain tightrope of potential arrest and imprisonme­nt. Since the new regulation­s explicitly outlaw the protest anthem “Glory to Hong Kong”, David, a 17-year-old high school student, has joined others in singing the song by replacing its letters with numbers.

“If we want to continue to protest legally, we have to be creative. The lyrics may violate the law and I will be at risk,” said David, after he loudly sang a series of what appear to be meaning

City is coming to terms with a new climate of fear – after all-powerful secret police sequestere­d 33-storey hotel

less numbers by way of example. Similarly, as the government has outlawed the popular slogan “Liberate Hong Kong, revolution of our times”, activists have started to abbreviate the phrase as “KFHG, SDGM” – referring to the Chinese English or Chinglish translatio­n. Some attempts at exploiting loopholes have fallen flat. One man was arrested at a protest for holding a flag bearing

“Hong Kong independen­ce” in large letters – and a small “No” in front of the slogan. Ten people have been charged under the new law with inciting others to subvert state power, according to police. But this time protesters have largely kept off the streets.

The city is coming to terms with a new climate of fear, symbolised by an all-powerful secret police force sequesteri­ng a 33-storey hotel in Causeway Bay district as its new headquarte­rs. “I’m scared if I speak something wrong, I’ll be arrested by the secret police,” Melody, 23, told The Sunday Telegraph. Some front-line protesters are considerin­g leaving the city whose freedoms they have fought so hard to preserve. Many were born after handover in 1997, meaning they are not eligible for a British National Overseas passport. “We still have room to struggle and kind of express our views, but our freedom will be thrashed by the Communist Party,” said Brandon, a student born after the millennium who hopes to move to Taiwan, which opposes mainland China.

“I hope the rest of my family will leave Hong Kong,” Ken, who is the youngest of six siblings and the only one unable to move to Britain, told The

Sunday Telegraph. “Living in Hong Kong is like living in fear.”

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 ??  ?? Customers at Leung’s bubble tea house, right, sit in front of the Lennon Wall. Blank notes have been posted in response to a new national security law, which makes previous slogans, left, illegal.
Customers at Leung’s bubble tea house, right, sit in front of the Lennon Wall. Blank notes have been posted in response to a new national security law, which makes previous slogans, left, illegal.

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