The Free Press Journal

CCTV in classrooms: Hong Kong wants to keep an eye on teachers

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In order to further clamp down on dissent against the draconian National Security Law in Hong Kong, pro-establishm­ent lawmakers argued on Friday that surveillan­ce cameras should be installed in Hong Kong schools to monitor teachers' speech.

According to South China Morning Post (SCMP), Tommy Cheung Yu-yan, an adviser to the Executive Council, Chief Executive Carrie Lam's de facto cabinet, suggested that placing CCTV cameras in classrooms would reveal if teachers had made "subversive remarks".

"The recordings can help schools monitor their teaching, and can also prove some innocent if they are smeared," Cheung said as quoted by SCMP.

Secretary for Education Kevin Yeung Yun-hung said the government ' clearly saw areas for improvemen­t' in the city's schools following the social unrest of 2019 where pro-democracy demonstrat­ors took to the city streets to protest against the authoritar­ian security law.

"If teachers are found to be incompeten­t in their posts, the Education Bureau will consider revoking their registrati­on for the well-being of students, to uphold the profession­alism of teachers and public confidence of the education system," he said.

Lam said she aimed to rebuild confidence in a city beset by the pro-democracy demonstrat­ions, adding it was "heartbreak­ing" that, among the more than 10,000 people arrested over the prodemocra­cy protests, 40 per cent were students.

"The social incidents also reveal that the law-abiding awareness of some young people is weak and that positive values such as mutual understand­ing and mutual respect are lacking," Lam claimed.

This comes after the authoritar­ian national security law was imposed by Beijing on Hong Kong that criminalis­es any act of secession (breaking away from China), subversion (underminin­g the power or authority of the central government), terrorism and collusion with foreign forces, with punishment­s of up to life in prison. It came into effect from July 1.

However, many countries have condemned Beijing for imposing this law citing that it clamps down on freedom of the people of Hong Kong.

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