Houston Chronicle

Phone checks at border worry travelers to China

- By Raymond Zhong

HONG KONG — Chinese border officers have begun routinely searching the phones of people who enter mainland China from Hong Kong, raising concerns that Beijing is trying to identify travelers sympatheti­c to the territory’s protest movement and further control what its people see about the unrest.

During the phone checks, officers look through photos, messages and other apps, three people whose devices were searched told The New York Times. As far as the travelers could tell, the people selected for extra inspection­s were mostly young men. The demonstrat­ions have been largely youth-driven.

The searches have come to light as the protests, now in their third month, have grown increasing­ly violent and disruptive, drawing sharp denunciati­ons from the mainland Chinese leadership and raising the possibilit­y that it might crack down on the demonstrat­ors.

Chinese paramilita­ry forces have gathered in Shenzhen, across the border from Hong Kong. On Thursday, tarp-covered troop transports and armored personnel carriers were seen parked outside a Shenzhen stadium.

The travelers whom The Times interviewe­d entered the mainland from West Kowloon station in Hong Kong, where the territory connects to China’s vast high-speed rail network, and where part of the terminal is under mainland Chinese jurisdicti­on.

But Au Nok-hin, a pro-democracy member of Hong Kong’s legislatur­e, said he had heard in the past week or two about travelers’ phones being checked at other crossings along the border, where there is a large flow of people in both directions every day.

“The ideologica­l control from China is very tough,” Au said.

The Chinese authoritie­s are not alone in demanding to examine travelers’ cellphones. Warrantles­s searches of phones and laptops by United States border agents have grown rapidly in recent years.

Even before train service began last year at the gleaming, clamshell-shaped station in the West Kowloon district, it attracted controvers­y over the Hong Kong’s government decision to allow mainland Chinese officers to enforce mainland law there.

The plan raised concerns among democracy supporters in Hong Kong about a further loss of autonomy for the territory — the same issue that has been one of the animating forces behind this summer’s antigovern­ment protests.

Billy Li, a representa­tive for the Progressiv­e Lawyers Group, which promotes democracy and the rule of law in Hong Kong, compared the situation to the case of local bookseller­s who vanished several years ago.

The men were involved in an industry that produced racy potboilers about the mainland’s Communist Party leadership. It turned out that they had been taken into custody in mainland China. They gave televised confession­s, which one later said had been forced.

The incidents “caused a huge outcry about mainland law being applied in Hong Kong,” Li said. “Now we see it daily in West Kowloon station.”

“What we were concerned about has now become a reality,” he said.

On the mainland Chinese side of the station Thursday, travelers described the extra inspection they underwent.

After presenting their IDs, they said, they were taken into a small area enclosed by black canvas panels. There, several uniformed officers were seated at tables, and travelers were asked to unlock their cellphones. Some officers flipped through the phones, while others checked bags and luggage.

At no point did the officers say what they were looking for, the travelers said. All three said that this was the first time the authoritie­s had checked their phones while crossing into mainland China from Hong Kong.

 ?? Lam Yik Fei / New York Times ?? A security checkpoint at the West Kowloon station in Hong Kong, where border officers have begun routinely searching the phones of people entering mainland China, raising concerns that Beijing is trying to identify protest sympathize­rs.
Lam Yik Fei / New York Times A security checkpoint at the West Kowloon station in Hong Kong, where border officers have begun routinely searching the phones of people entering mainland China, raising concerns that Beijing is trying to identify protest sympathize­rs.

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