The Borneo Post

Five ways HK has changed under China’s security law

- By Jerome Taylor

HONG KONG: Beijing’s new national security law for Hong Kong is the most radical shift in how the semi-autonomous city is run since it was handed back to China by Britain in 1997.

China’s authoritar­ian leaders say the powers will restore stability after a year of pro-democracy protests and will not stifle freedoms.

But it has already sent fear coursing through a city used to being able to speak openly and fundamenta­lly altered the city’s relationsh­ip to both Beijing and the outside world.

Legal firewall toppled

A key pillar of Hong Kong’s success has been an independen­t judiciary, insulated from mainland China’s party-controlled courts and their conviction rates of around 99 per cent. That legal firewall has now come down.

The law grants China jurisdicti­on in some national security cases and allows mainland security agents to set up shop openly in the city for the first time. Those personnel are not bound by local laws.

Local police have been granted broad surveillan­ce powers that do not require judicial oversight while trials involving state secrets can be held behind closed doors without juries. China also claims universal jurisdicti­on.

That could make it risky for Beijing critics, including foreigners, to travel to Hong Kong or through its airport.

Central government control tightened

Hong Kong normally passes its own laws through a legislatur­e.

But the national security law was written in Beijing and imposed on the city – its contents kept secret until it was enacted on Tuesday evening.

It establishe­s supremacy over the Basic Law, the miniconsti­tution that grants the city certain freedoms as well as judicial and legislativ­e autonomy.

The law states that if there is a discrepanc­y between the two systems, China’s law takes precedence. It also embeds mainland officials within Hong Kong’s government.

A new national security commission is headed by the head of Beijing’s Liaison Office and staffed by both mainland and local officials.

Article 22 of the Basic Law says the central government cannot interfere in the running of Hong Kong. But Beijing has made clear national security trumps that and is the central government’s purview.

Slogans outlawed

Beijing and Hong Kong’s government said the new powers would only target a ‘very small minority’.

But it has quickly become clear certain political views, even if expressed peacefully, are now illegal – especially calls for independen­ce or autonomy.

The first arrests under the new law came on Wednesday, almost all of them people who were in possession of flags or leaflets promoting independen­ce.

On Thursday the government confirmed that one of the city’s most popular protest chants – “Liberate Hong Kong, revolution of our times” was now banned.

For some the phrase represents genuine aspiration­s to split Hong Kong from China.

But for many others it is a more general cry for democracy and an expression of rising frustratio­n with Beijing’s rule.

Protest walls scrubbed

The impact of the law on people’s speech has been visible both digitally and physically. Some restaurant­s and businesses have removed political displays after warnings from police.

Officials were filmed scraping certain words and phrases from a protest wall at a university campus.

Across town, posters and phrases are being removed from ‘Lennon Walls’ that first sprung up during last year’s prodemocra­cy protests.

Some Hong Kongers are getting creative, replacing outlawed slogans with altered versions or puns that only hint at politics in a bid to stay ahead of the new laws.

Online, people have scrubbed chat groups and anonymised their social media accounts – or deleted them entirely.

Politician­s flee, shut down parties

For years Hong Kong was a place to which people fled when they feared persecutio­n on the authoritar­ian mainland. Now it is a place people flee from.

Prominent democracy activist Nathan Law announced on Thursday evening that he had gone overseas to an undisclose­d location because of the law.

He and a group of fellow young activists disbanded their prodemocra­cy party Demosisto two days earlier, fearing prosecutio­n, even though it does not advocate Hong Kong independen­ce.

“As I look down at the magnificen­ce of Hong Kong from the airplane, this image has become one unforgetta­ble scene in my mind,” he wrote.

“I hope the day will come when I can return to Hong Kong again and I can still be that young guy who hasn’t forgotten about his initial aspiration­s.”

Other groups who more openly advocate autonomy for the city also announced they were shutting down.

 ??  ?? A woman sticks a blank note onto a ‘Lennon Wall’ outside a pro-democracy restaurant in Hong Kong. — AFP photos
A woman sticks a blank note onto a ‘Lennon Wall’ outside a pro-democracy restaurant in Hong Kong. — AFP photos
 ??  ?? A man walks past a wall with pro-democracy posters that have been covered over with blank paper in Hong Kong.
A man walks past a wall with pro-democracy posters that have been covered over with blank paper in Hong Kong.

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