Bangkok Post

HK cracks down on anthem protests

New bill ‘eroding’ freedom: activists

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HONG KONG: Police placed a dragnet around the financial hub’s legislatur­e yesterday and fired pepper-ball rounds in the commercial district as they tried to stamp out protests against a bill banning insults to China’s national anthem.

The latest unrest comes days after China announced separate plans to impose a sweeping national security law on Hong Kong following last year’s huge and often violent pro-democracy rallies.

That move has prompted US President Donald Trump to warn that Hong Kong might lose its status as a global financial centre if the city’s freedoms and vaunted judicial independen­ce are swept aside.

Yesterday’s protests were sparked by a planned afternoon debate among lawmakers to criminalis­e insults to the national anthem with up to three years in jail, the latest measure activists say is eroding freedoms in the city.

Police surrounded the legislatur­e with water-filled barriers and fanned out across the city to conduct widespread stop-and-search operations in a bid to deter mass gatherings.

A few hundred protesters held brief lunchtime rallies in Causeway Bay and Central districts, the latter broken up by officers firing crowd-control rounds filled with a pepper-based irritant.

“It’s like a de facto curfew now,” Nathan Law, a prominent pro-democracy advocate said. “I think the government has to understand why people are really angry.”

Gatherings of more than eight people in public are currently banned in Hong Kong under emergency anti-coronaviru­s measures, although the city has halted its outbreak.

Under the “one country, two systems” model agreed before the city’s return from Britain to China, Hong Kong is supposed to be guaranteed certain liberties until 2047 that are denied to those on the mainland.

The deal fuelled the city’s rise as a world-class financial hub and gave Chinese companies a crucial channel to raise capital. But in recent years political unrest has swept through the city, something Beijing’s communist rulers are determined to end.

The legislatur­e was blockaded and later trashed by demonstrat­ors during last year’s protests as authoritie­s tried to fast-track an eventually scrapped bill allowing extraditio­ns to the mainland.

Police said officers uncovered some Molotov cocktails as well as other “illegal” items such as gas masks, hammers and pliers during stop-and-search operations yesterday.

Hong Kong’s pro-Beijing government has vowed to pass the national anthem law as soon as possible.

“As Hong Kongers, we have a moral responsibi­lity to respect the national anthem,” Matthew Cheung, Hong Kong’s de facto deputy leader, told reporters ahead of the debate.

Addressing concerns that the law would damage free speech, Mr Cheung used a Chinese idiom often translated as “making a mountain out of a molehill”.

Beijing has been infuriated by Hong Kongers — especially football fans — booing the national anthem to signal dissatisfa­ction with China.

The city’s pro-democracy opposition say the bill is a fresh attempt to criminalis­e dissent.

Fights have broken out between rival lawmakers over the legislatio­n.

Pro-democracy politician­s are prevented from holding a majority in the legislatur­e, only some of whose members are elected by popular vote. But for months they used filibuster­ing within a legislativ­e committee to stop the bill reaching the floor.

The city’s pro-Beijing faction seized control of the committee earlier this month — a move opponents said was unconstitu­tional.

Yesterday’ session is the bill’s second reading. A third reading is likely to come next week, after which it will become law if approved.

Beijing portrays Hong Kong’s democracy protests as a foreignbac­ked plot to destabilis­e the motherland. Activists say their rallies, which have been attended by millions, are the only way to voice opposition in a city without fully free elections.

Last week Beijing announced plans to enact legislatio­n banning secession, subversion, terrorism and foreign interferen­ce. That law, which has yet to be published in full, will bypass the legislatur­e and be drawn up directly by Beijing. It includes plans to allow China’s security agencies and secret police to openly set up shop in Hong Kong for the first time.

 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? Riot police raise a blue flag warning demonstrat­ors in the Causeway Bay district to disperse during a protest in Hong Kong yesterday.
BLOOMBERG Riot police raise a blue flag warning demonstrat­ors in the Causeway Bay district to disperse during a protest in Hong Kong yesterday.

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