Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Hong Kong mass arrest: A further erosion of freedoms?

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A pro-Beijing lawmaker tells DW’s Sarah Kelly that freedoms have been tightened in Hong Kong under the national security law, but the world is "overreacti­ng" to the recent mass arrest of prodemocra­cy activists.

"There has been a tightening of freedom to express views, particular­ly when it comes to Hong Kong gaining some kind of a greater control over its own destiny," a pro-Beijing lawmaker for the special administra­tive region has said.

"If anybody comes up with any kind of claim that goes against the Basic Law, yes, the freedom to express such views is much less today than before because of the national security bill," Hong Konger politician Michael Tien told DW's Conflict Zone.

Joshua Wong, Agnes Chow, Ivan Lam: Activists' methods akin to 'treason'

Worries over creeping authoritar­ianism have only grown since Beijing imposed its vague national security law in June 2020 after months of mass protest. Prominent young activists including Wong, Chow and Lam have since been jailed and others have fled abroad to avoid being targeted under the new law.

Tien did not wish to com

ment on particular activists but said asking foreign government­s to implement sanctions against one’s own country — as Wong has done against China — was "unthinkabl­e" and would be seen elsewhere as "treason."

In early January, the mass arrest of dozens of pro-democracy activists in Hong Kong provoked internatio­nal condemnati­on and was seen as further evidence of Beijing tightening its control over the semi-autonomous territory.

UN: Opposition figures detained for 'exercising legitimate rights'

But when asked by DW’s

Sarah Kelly if Hong Kong was witnessing a dismantlin­g of its freedoms and its opposition, Tien disagreed and said everyone had to "cool down" over the arrests, suggesting investigat­ions had to run their course. "What remains to be seen — what is important — [is] what specific charge do they end up coming through? And do they go according to every word in the national security law?"

Opposition figures in Hong Kong said the roundup was linked to their participat­ion in a primary ballot in July 2020, in which over 600,000 people voted, to select pro-democracy candi

dates ahead of elections.

The UN’s human rights office denounced the arrests of activists, saying they indicated that "as had been feared, the offense of subversion under the National Security Law is indeed being used to detain individual­s for exercising legitimate rights to participat­e in political and public life."

'The whole world is overreacti­ng' to arrests

Was Tien disturbed that voting can get a person arrested in Hong Kong? Describing the background to the arrests, Tien said he didn’t believe the primary itself was unlawful, but reaction to the arrests had been overblown.

"And I'm supposed to be the more liberal of the pro-Beijing camp membership. The whole world is overreacti­ng. They don't even know the details of these arrests or what it's all about ... Most likely a lot of them will never be charged. The key is, at the end, who will be charged and on what basis."

Tien sought to offer a constituti­onal distinctio­n between holding a primary and prodemocra­cy activists soliciting foreign government­s' help with ensuring democratic norms in Hong Kong. "One of the key suspicions is foreign government funding to fund the primary. Now, if they can prove that, then it's a whole new different matter," he went on to say.

Banned lawmakers 'have due process'

In November, four opposition lawmakers were barred from the Legislativ­e Council by the executive, which the Hong Kong Bar Associatio­n said violated "the basic principles of fairness and due process inherent in the Rule of Law."

"We do have due process," Tien told Kelly. "And if they lose, they can go to the appeal court. And if they lose [again], they can

go to the court of final appeal. Yes, they haven't done that. And

I think they should."

Tien said he was "not totally behind government disqualify­ing these people on all the grounds and specific allegation­s that they make" and was waiting to see them defend themselves against the government’s allegation­s in court.

"They should put the government to test about this kind of disqualifi­cation," he said. "[The]

Hong Kong government may not win all the time."

 ??  ?? Democracy activist and media mogul Jimmy Lai was also detained in 2020 under the national security law
Democracy activist and media mogul Jimmy Lai was also detained in 2020 under the national security law

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