The Guardian (USA)

Hong Kong police launch hotline for residents to inform on each other

- Emma Graham-Harrison

Hong Kong police have launched a hotline for the city’s residents to inform anonymousl­y on anyone they allege has broken a sweeping new national security law.

Critics say the measure has disturbing echoes of surveillan­ce methods used in mainland China, will deepen divisions in the city and could be exploited by individual­s trying to settle personal, business or political scores.

The system allows people to send tip-offs via video, audio files and pictures to the police, without sharing their personal details. More than 1,000 pieces of informatio­n were submitted on Thursday, the first day of operation, the South China Morning Post reported.

The system “replicat[es] the Chinese Communist party’s model of relying on grassroots informants,” Maya Wang, a senior China researcher at Human Rights Watch, said on Twitter.

Hong Kong authoritie­s said the law brought in by Beijing in June would affect only a “small minority who endanger national security”. But it has already been used to target prodemocra­cy politician­s, activists and academics, and to curtail a year-long protest movement.

The Democratic party legislator James To said the hotline could tear an already divided city apart, and was unnecessar­y when the police’s existing national security unit already had “tremendous” powers.

“It will be a serious blow to freedom in Hong Kong and will undermine the trust between people,” he told the local broadcaste­r RTHK. “Much of the reports will be related to individual­s’ political opinions.”

Comments on a police Facebook page promoting the site deepened concerns that some in Hong Kong hoped to use it for surveillan­ce of neighbours with political difference­s.

Posters said they would use it to denounce people who ate at restaurant­s known to back the prodemocra­cy movement, RTHK reported. Others made comments attacking “cockroache­s”, a term sometimes used to attack supporters of the pro-democracy movement.

Joshua Wong, a student activist, said the hotline carried disturbing echoes of one of mainland China’s most turbulent periods, the Cultural Revolution of the 1960s and 1970s. Then, neighbours, colleagues and even families were encouraged to denounce each other, with devastatin­g and sometimes deadly consequenc­es.

“No matter where you are, your private conversati­ons, business chats, social media posts or school lectures can be reported via this new hotline,” Wong said. “By putting ‘ eyes and ears everywhere’, the hotline can also be used for business retaliatio­n, by encouragin­g citizens snitching on each other and cooking up charges against business competitor­s, just like what happened during China’s Cultural Revolution.”

 ??  ?? People sit in a Hong Kong cafe in March. Some people said they would denounce people who ate at restaurant­s known to back the prodemocra­cy movement, RTHK reported. Photograph: Billy HC Kwok/Getty Images
People sit in a Hong Kong cafe in March. Some people said they would denounce people who ate at restaurant­s known to back the prodemocra­cy movement, RTHK reported. Photograph: Billy HC Kwok/Getty Images

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