Bangkok Post

Dread of arrest in Hong Kong over ‘Double 10’

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>>HONG KONG: For more than 50 years, Ng Hong-lim has led celebratio­ns in Hong Kong to mark Taiwan’s national day — but this year he fears doing so could get him arrested.

“I don’t think there will be another chance,” Mr Ng sighed. “It’s really regrettabl­e.”

Oct 10 — known as “Double Ten” — marks the anniversar­y of the 1911 uprising which ushered in a new Republic of China (ROC).

After losing China’s civil war to the communists in 1949, the Kuomintang (KMT) fled to Taiwan, where the mantle of the republic lived on — along with its national holiday.

In Hong Kong, KMT supporters have long displayed Taiwanese flags and marked the day in grand style.

Communist China has long recognised the date’s broader historical significan­ce, but officials in Hong Kong are now loath to allow open displays of pro-Taiwan sentiment, as efforts to snuff out any hint of public opposition grow.

Hong Kong’s security chief Chris Tang last month warned that celebratin­g the “Double Ten” could constitute support for Taiwanese independen­ce — a crime under the city’s draconian new security law.

But Mr Ng says the festivity bears no link with separatism.

“Now we are not allowed to express it, but we still remember it in our hearts,” the octogenari­an said at a proKMT union office in Hong Kong, where an ROC flag and portrait of Chinese revolution­ary Sun Yat-sen are displayed.

Born on the Chinese mainland, Mr Ng fled to Hong Kong in the 1950s.

At the age of 15, he left for Taiwan and joined the army in hopes of defending the ROC — to which he still pledges unwavering allegiance.

Following security chief Tang’s warning last month, restaurant bookings for more than 100 tables by Mr Ng’s group was abruptly cancelled.

Hong Konger Lee Kwok-keung has fond childhood memories of boisterous “Double Ten” celebratio­ns.

“Lots of blue-sky clear-sun flags were hung up, covering mountains and streets,” Mr Lee, chairman of a pro-KMT trade union, said, referring to the Taiwanese flag.

Those flags disappeare­d from the streets following Hong Kong’s handover to China in 1997, but were permitted at mini-galas, where KMT stalwarts would sing patriotic songs.

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