Los Angeles Times

In Taiwan, Hong Kongers seek asylum from Beijing

‘We will always fight for our homeland,’ refugees say

- By Alice Su and Ryan Ho Kilpatrick

TAIPEI, Taiwan — The slogans were the same, but they felt different in this foreign land, drifting through the air in a mix of Cantonese and Mandarin: “Five demands, not one less!” and “Free Hong Kong, revolution now!”

Protesters stood before the crowd, waving flags that read “Hong Kong independen­ce” and wearing the same yellow hard hats and gas masks they’d worn back home to protect them from tear gas and police beatings.

But this wasn’t home. There was no police squadron waiting for them here, no need for live maps and warnings on encrypted chat groups, no fear of coming clashes late in the night — only a disjointed sense of distance from the front lines 500 miles away.

Solidarity rallies for Hong Kong’s pro-democracy movement have become common in Taiwan, especially as thousands of Hong Kongers, who unlike Taiwanese speak mostly Cantonese, resettle in this democratic island nation.

“I wish I could always stay in Hong Kong, but conditions there keep deteriorat­ing,” said Connie Ng, 30, who often traveled to Taiwan for work and moved here last year because she felt safer. Many of her friends are still resisting back home, she said, but they were

scared and wondering how long they could endure mainland China’s threats to civil rights in Hong Kong.

More than 5,800 Hong Kongers moved to Taiwan in 2019 — an increase of more than 41% from the previous year. They arrived as 9,000 demonstrat­ors were arrested in Hong Kong during mass anti-government protests against proposed legislatio­n that would extradite criminal suspects to mainland China.

While some protesters vow to “stay and fight,” many Hong Kongers are looking to escape as China accelerate­s its crackdown, with plans in coming months to establish secret police, tighten national security and reform Hong Kong ’s liberal education system.

More than 2,800 additional Hong Kongers relocated to Taiwan within the first four months of 2020, according to Taiwan’s National Immigratio­n Agency. Taiwan’s government announced Thursday that a new agency, the Hong Kong Service and Exchange Office, would help Hong Kong “shelter seekers” with residency, housing, jobs and legal protection­s.

The office, which is set to open July 1, comes after a pledge from President Tsai Ing-wen in May to extend humanitari­an assistance for newcomers.

Tsai’s promise reflects a swell in public support for Hong Kongers in Taiwan, which has no refugee law that could grant them asylum but can assist them if their safety and liberty are “immediatel­y threatened for political reasons.”

“It’s hard to imagine that Hong Kong could have gone from a destinatio­n to a source of political refugees so rapidly,” said Leon, a former Hong Kong protester in his mid-20s who fled here and did not want to use his full name.

Hong Kong has long been a city of refugees. For more than a century and a half as a British colony, it received waves of asylum seekers f leeing the revolution­s, invasions, civil wars and political purges of mainland China. Even after its handover to Chinese sovereignt­y in 1997, semi-autonomous Hong Kong, which is ruled by Beijing’s promise of “one country, two systems,” believed its freedoms would endure.

Leon was born into that Hong Kong, a wealthy, stable, financial hub with little initial interferen­ce from Beijing. He remembers growing up proud to be Chinese, especially when Beijing hosted the 2008 Olympics. When pro-democracy activists each year held vigils on June 4 and marches on July 1, Leon shrugged.

“It felt pointless,” he said. “Every time, they were just ignored by the government.”

Things began changing in 2014, when mass protests erupted over the mainland government’s denial of universal suffrage for Hong Kong. Leon was too young to participat­e but felt his own sense of “Chinese” identity shift as he watched students not much older than him getting tear-gassed in the streets. But nothing changed.

A renewed protest movement, however, drew an estimated 1 million peaceful protesters into the streets last year to oppose the proposed extraditio­n bill. The sight made Leon proud that his people cared about something beyond “money in our pockets and food on the table.”

A week later, Leon, who had recently graduated and was working an entry-level job in sales, joined the protests. He was tear-gassed, which only made him more determined to stay on the streets. Tensions escalated, with police calling protesters “cockroache­s” and protesters cursing entire police families. Hired thugs began attacking opposition legislator­s and civil society leaders on the streets.

In November, after one of his friends was arrested, Leon decided to leave.

But Taiwan offered limited protection. The country — which the Chinese Communist Party claims but has never controlled — has been excluded from the United Nations since the 1970s and is not a signatory to the U.N. Refugee Convention. Public opinion polls show that more than 60% of Taiwanese support the introducti­on of a refugee law.

“It’s not about pro- or anti-Hong Kong. Everyone is pro-Hong Kong,” said Lev Nachman, a Taiwan-based University of Irvine PhD candidate whose research focuses on social movements and political parties in Taiwan and Hong Kong.

A Taiwanese parliament­ary task force establishe­d last month to advocate for Hong Kong inspired a rare moment of cross-party consensus, drawing more than 40 legislator­s from across the bitterly divided political spectrum.

One legislator suggested that Hong Kongers could obtain Taiwan citizenshi­p through military service. Even the Nationalis­t party, which has historical­ly leaned toward unificatio­n with China and is perceived as conciliato­ry to Beijing, recently called on Tsai, who has been defiant against China’s claims on her territory, to do more.

Jacob Lin, a lawyer who helped settle some 200 Hong Kong protesters in Taiwan, said Tsai’s reelection in January reassured many selfexiles who’d worried that they would not be welcome under a Nationalis­t government. He said he is confident of Taiwan’s “good intentions” to open pathways to residency based on work, study and economic qualificat­ions.

But sheltering Hong Kongers is not solely Taiwan’s responsibi­lity, he said: “It is the moral imperative for every free and democratic society.”

So far, only the United

Kingdom has taken similar measures, offering a way to residency for up to 3 million Hong Kongers who already hold British National (Overseas) status — an identity for which they had to register prior to Hong Kong’s handover in 1997.

Exiles like Leon, who has enrolled in a postgradua­te program in Taiwan and is looking for a job, say that leaving doesn’t mean giving up. It means survival and a chance to continue fighting for Hong Kong from the outside.

For generation­s, Hong Kong was celebrated as a safe harbor for freethinke­rs, while Taipei was the capital of a one-party authoritar­ian state under the Nationalis­t Party, which took over Taiwan after losing a civil war against China’s Communist Party.

Taiwan survived decades of martial law and suppressio­n of speech before slowly moving into democratiz­ation, education reform and ongoing efforts to confront its history through truth and reconcilia­tion. Throughout that period, the Taiwanese diaspora played a critical role through pressure groups and publicatio­ns that couldn’t have existed within Taiwan.

That’s the role Leon believes he and other exiles could play: forming a “first stop” in Taiwan for fleeing Hong Kongers to reassemble and plot strategies as pressure back home intensifie­s against the pro-democracy movement.

“We haven’t just run away and said goodbye,” he said. “We will always be Hong Kongers. We will always fight for our homeland.”

But he didn’t know when he would ever return.

Special correspond­ent Ho Kilpatrick reported from Taipei and Times staff writer Su from Beijing.

 ?? Chiang Ying-ying Associated Press ?? STUDENTS from Hong Kong and their Taiwanese supporters protest against Beijing’s incendiary national security legislatio­n on May 28 in Taipei.
Chiang Ying-ying Associated Press STUDENTS from Hong Kong and their Taiwanese supporters protest against Beijing’s incendiary national security legislatio­n on May 28 in Taipei.
 ?? Chiang Ying-ying Associated Press ?? PROTESTERS from Hong Kong and Taiwan gather last week at Democracy Square in Taipei to mark the first anniversar­y of a mass rally in Hong Kong against its now-withdrawn extraditio­n bill.
Chiang Ying-ying Associated Press PROTESTERS from Hong Kong and Taiwan gather last week at Democracy Square in Taipei to mark the first anniversar­y of a mass rally in Hong Kong against its now-withdrawn extraditio­n bill.

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