Tag: Hong Kong

  • A Hong Kong judge convicts five people for children’s books

    Five speech therapists were convicted guilty of publishing seditious children’s books by a Hong Kong judge.

    Authorities believed that their novels, which are about sheep attempting to keep wolves out of their hamlet, included a blatantly political message.

    After a two-month trial, a government-picked national security judge said their “seditious intention” was clear.

    It comes amid part of a wider crackdown on civil liberties by Chinese authorities in the city.

    The group of five speech therapists, who were founding members of a union, produced three cartoon e-books that some interpreted as trying to explain Hong Kong’s pro-democracy movement to children.

    “The seditious intention stems not merely from the words, but from the words with the proscribed effects intended to result in the mind of children,” wrote Judge Kwok Wai-kin in his judgment.

    Lai Man-ling, Melody Yeung, Sidney Ng, Samuel Chan, and Fong Tsz-ho, who were all found guilty, had already been held in jail for more than a year ahead of Wednesday’s verdict.
  • Asia sees rise in market ,China records a decline

    The majority of Asian markets increased on Monday as investors cheered evidence of declining US inflation; however, Hong Kong and Shanghai declined as statistics indicated that China’s economy was suffering due to the Covid-19 limitations.

    The markets have been worried that additional hikes of a comparable magnitude could stifle economic recovery after two straight increases in borrowing costs by the Federal Reserve of three-quarters of a percentage point.

    Last week’s indicators of improved inflation statistics have sparked discussion about whether the Fed may change course more rapidly from its current stance of moving aggressively to raise interest rates.

    “We’re definitely heading in a better direction,” Kristina Hooper, Invesco chief global market strategist, told Bloomberg Television.

    “It looks like we are passed peak for inflation. The problem is inflation is still very, very high.”

    Wall Street ended Friday on a positive note after consumer and producer price data indicated a meaningful cooling in inflation.

    The optimistic mood carried over to Asia, with Tokyo climbing one percent as GDP data showed the Japanese economy recovering after the government lifted Covid-19 curbs on businesses.

    Sydney rose 0.5 percent and Taipei was up 0.7 percent. Wellington, Manila, and Kuala Lumpur also saw gains. Seoul and Mumbai were closed for holidays.

    Among the few losers, Hong Kong and Shanghai fell as Chinese economic figures came in weaker than analysts’ expectations.

    China unexpectedly cut key interest rates as a raft of data released Monday indicated the world’s second-largest economy was struggling with virus restrictions and a slumping property market.

    The figures showed China’s industrial production and retail sales growth for July came in lower than expected. Industrial production was up 3.8 percent year-on-year, but down from 3.9 percent in June and below Bloomberg economists’ forecasts of a 4.3 percent increase.

    “The risk of stagflation in the world economy is rising, and the foundation for domestic economic recovery is not yet solid,” China’s National Bureau of Statistics warned.

    Beijing’s rigid adherence to a zero-Covid strategy has held back economic recovery as snap lockdowns and long quarantines batter business activity and a recovery in consumption.

    “July’s economic data is very alarming,” Raymond Yeung, Greater China economist at Australia & New Zealand Banking Group, told Bloomberg.

    “The Covid-zero policy continues to hit the service sector and dampen household consumption.”

    Oil was lower in Asian trade, with WTI down one percent at $91.20 while Brent was off 0.9 percent at $97.25.

  • Hong Kong suffers biggest population drop as exodus accelerates

    Hong Kong has recorded its sharpest annual drop in population, with experts blaming the decline on strict Covid-19 control measures and a political crackdown that have taken the shine off a financial hub long advertised as “Asia’s world city.”

    The city’s total population fell from 7.41 million people to 7.29 million, a 1.6% decrease, the Census and Statistics Department said Thursday.

    That’s the steepest decline since the government began tracking figures in 1961.

    Though authorities attributed some of that to a “natural” decrease — more deaths than births — experts said the figures also reflected an exodus that has accelerated in the past few years amid periods of massive social upheaval that have included anti-government protests and the coronavirus pandemic.

    Around 113,200 residents left Hong Kong over the past year, the department said, compared to 89,200 the year before. The figures include expatriates and other non-permanent residents.

    Throughout the pandemic, experts and industry leaders have warned that the city’s heavy-handed Covid-19 restrictions would drive away residents, travelers and expatriates.

    Even as the rest of the world opened up, for months Hong Kong continued to close borders, suspend air routes and impose mandatory quarantines and social distancing measures such as caps on public gatherings and limits on restaurant services.

    Mask mandates remain in effect, while public spaces like beaches and gyms have faced long closures during periods of high case numbers.

    Hong Kong's Covid divide: Expats get more perks while domestic workers lose their homes

    The measures have devastated businesses, with some of Hong Kong’s most famous sites — including the Jumbo Kingdom floating restaurant — shuttering in the past year.

    “More than two and a half years of Covid-19 restrictions are taking a heavy toll on businesses and the economy,” the Hong Kong General Chamber of Commerce said in a statement this month.

    The group’s CEO, George Leung, added that Hong Kong’s border closures were “stifling any prospect of economic recovery” and urged authorities to come up with a “concrete timetable to reopen Hong Kong.”

    The government has conceded the impact of its policies, saying on Thursday that flight restrictions — such as requiring all arrivals to be vaccinated, test negative for Covid, and pay for quarantine in a hotel upon arrival — “had interrupted population inflow.”

    People wearing face masks walking in Hong Kong on July 12.

    This week the government eased the quarantine requirement, lowering the number of days arrivals must stay in a designated hotel from seven to three.

    The government said some Hong Kongers may have chosen to settle elsewhere during the pandemic.

    Hong Kong tries to 'relaunch' its economy by lifting flight bans and cutting quarantine

    “Meanwhile, Hong Kong residents who had left Hong Kong before the pandemic may have chosen to reside in other places temporarily or were unable to return to Hong Kong. All these (factors) might have contributed to the net outflow of Hong Kong residents during the period,” said a government spokesperson.

    But the government downplayed the population drop and seemed to suggest Hong Kong was still a bustling finance hub.

    “Being an international city, Hong Kong’s population has always been mobile,” said the spokesperson. “During the past 10 years, net outflows of Hong Kong residents … were recorded for most of the years.”

    The spokesperson added that the problem of Covid-driven departures “could be resolved when the quarantine and social distancing measures relaxed,” and that numbers would rise due to government efforts to attract overseas talent.

    The political crackdown

    Covid aside, experts say another factor behind the exodus is Beijing’s political crackdown on the city.

    After Hong Kong’s 2019 pro-democracy, anti-government protests, Beijing imposed a sweeping national security law, under which the government has all but wiped out formal opposition. Authorities have raided and closed down newsrooms, jailed activists and protesters, unseated elected lawmakers, heightened censorship both online and in printed publications, and changed school curricula.

    Since the law was introduced, many former protesters and lawmakers have fled overseas, fearing prosecution. Many individuals and families have told CNN they too are considering leaving because they feel the city has been transformed beyond recognition.

    In the aftermath of the protests, a number of countries including the United Kingdom, Australia and Canada opened new visa pathways for Hong Kongers looking to leave. Many former protesters and activists have also fled to the self-governing democratic island of Taiwan.

    The government has repeatedly defended the security law as restoring law and order to the city, claiming that Hong Kong’s freedoms of speech, press and assembly remain intact.

    The security law “has swiftly and effectively restored stability and security,” the government said on July 29, adding that residents “are relieved and happy to see that Hong Kong now continues to be an open, safe, vibrant and business-friendly metropolis.”

     

    Source: CNN

  • Population decline :Hong Kong suffers biggest ever population drop as exodus accelerates

    Hong Kong has recorded its sharpest annual drop in population, with experts blaming the decline on strict Covid control measures and a political crackdown that has taken the shine off a financial hub long advertised as “Asia’s world city.”

    The city’s total population fell from 7.41 million people to 7.29 million, a 1.6% decrease, the Census and Statistics Department said Thursday.
    That’s the steepest decline since the government began tracking figures in 1961.
    Though authorities attributed some of that to a “natural” decrease — more deaths than births — experts said the figures also reflected an exodus that has accelerated in the past few years amid periods of massive social upheaval that have included anti-government protests and the coronavirus pandemic.
    Around 113,200 residents left Hong Kong over the past year, the department said, compared to 89,200 the year before. The figures include expatriates and other non-permanent residents.
    Throughout the pandemic, experts and industry leaders have warned that the city’s heavy-handed Covid-19 restrictions would drive away residents, travelers, and expatriates.
    Even as the rest of the world opened up, for months Hong Kong continued to close borders, suspend air routes and impose mandatory quarantines and social distancing measures such as caps on public gatherings and limits on restaurant services.
    Mask mandates remain in effect, while public spaces like beaches and gyms have faced long closures during periods of high case numbers.
    The measures have devastated businesses, with some of Hong Kong’s most famous sites — including the Jumbo Kingdom floating restaurant — shuttering in the past year.
    “More than two and a half years of Covid-19 restrictions are taking a heavy toll on businesses and the economy,” the Hong Kong General Chamber of Commerce said in a statement this month.
    The group’s CEO, George Leung, added that Hong Kong’s border closures were “stifling any prospect of economic recovery” and urged authorities to come up with a “concrete timetable to reopen Hong Kong.”
    The government has conceded the impact of its policies, saying on Thursday that flight restrictions — such as requiring all arrivals to be vaccinated, tested negative for Covid, and pay for quarantine in a hotel upon arrival — “had interrupted population inflow.”

    People wearing face masks walking in Hong Kong on July 12.

    This week the government eased the quarantine requirement, lowering the number of days arrivals must stay in a designated hotel from seven to three.
    The government said some Hong Kongers may have chosen to settle elsewhere during the pandemic.
    “Meanwhile, Hong Kong residents who had left Hong Kong before the pandemic may have chosen to reside in other places temporarily or were unable to return to Hong Kong. All these (factors) might have contributed to the net outflow of Hong Kong residents during the period,” said a government spokesperson.
    But the government downplayed the population drop and seemed to suggest Hong Kong was still a bustling finance hub.
    “Being an international city, Hong Kong’s population has always been mobile,” said the spokesperson. “During the past 10 years, net outflows of Hong Kong residents … were recorded for most of the years.”
    The spokesperson added that the problem of Covid-driven departures “could be resolved when the quarantine and social distancing measures relaxed,” and that numbers would rise due to government efforts to attract overseas talent.

    The political crackdown

    Covid aside, experts say another factor behind the exodus is Beijing’s political crackdown on the city.
    After Hong Kong’s 2019 pro-democracy, anti-government protests, Beijing imposed a sweeping national security law, under which the government has all but wiped out formal opposition.
    Authorities have raided and closed down newsrooms, jailed activists and protesters, unseated elected lawmakers, heightened censorship both online and in printed publications, and changed school curricula.
    After a decade in power, where is Xi Jinping taking China?
    After a decade in power, where is Xi Jinping taking China? 04:18
    Since the law was introduced, many former protesters and lawmakers have fled overseas, fearing prosecution. Many individuals and families have told CNN they too are considering leaving because they feel the city has been transformed beyond recognition.
    In the aftermath of the protests, a number of countries including the United Kingdom, Australia, and Canada opened new visa pathways for Hong Kongers looking to leave. Many former protesters and activists have also fled to the self-governing democratic island of Taiwan.
    The government has repeatedly defended the security law as restoring law and order to the city, claiming that Hong Kong’s freedoms of speech, press, and assembly remain intact.
    The security law “has swiftly and effectively restored stability and security,” the government said on July 29, adding that residents “are relieved and happy to see that Hong Kong now continues to be an open, safe, vibrant and business-friendly metropolis
  • Hong Kong cuts Covid hotel quarantine to three days

    Hong Kong will ease its Covid hotel quarantine requirements for people arriving from overseas, Chief Executive John Lee said on Monday.

    From Friday, those arriving in the city will have to stay at designated quarantine hotels for three days.

    They will then undergo another four days of “medical surveillance” either at home or at any hotel.

    Currently, overseas arrivals have to quarantine for seven days at designated hotels.

    During the “medical surveillance” period, people can go out but may not enter places that require vaccine passes to be checked, including bars, gyms, and amusement centers.

    They are also barred from participating in any mask-off activities – such as certain forms of exercise – or entering homes for the elderly or disabled people and designated medical venues.

    But if they test negative daily during the four-day period, they can take public transport, go to work and enter shopping centers or public markets.

    Mr. Lee said that the government would “actively control” the number of Covid cases.

    Covid cases soared in Hong Kong earlier this year after the arrival of the highly transmissible Omicron variant.

    As the rest of the world opens up, the city’s insistence on maintaining strict travel restrictions, which have put the economy under severe strain, has been increasingly criticized.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Hong Kong: Xi Jinping defends China’s rule at handover anniversary

    China’s “one country two systems” model of ruling Hong Kong has worked in protecting the city and must continue long term, says Xi Jinping.

    The Chinese leader mounted a stern defence of the political system in a speech in Hong Kong, following recent international criticism.

    Hong Kong is marking 25 years since Britain returned the city to China.

    It is under tight security as it hosts Mr Xi, who is on his first trip outside of the mainland in two years.

    Under “one country two systems”, Hong Kong is supposed to be governed in a way that gives it a high degree of autonomy and protects freedom of speech and assembly, and other rights not found in mainland China.

    But in recent years China has been criticised for increasing its control of Hong Kong and enacting laws and reforms that stifle free speech and dissent.

    The “one, country two systems” principle arose out of an agreement between Britain and China and is enshrined in law in Hong Kong. The protections run out in 2047, a deadline which many in Hong Kong have long been worried about.

    But on Friday Mr Xi said it “must be adhered to over the long run” – the clearest sign yet that China intends to preserve the political model, which critics say has already been compromised to suit Beijing.

    Flanked by the Chinese and Hong Kong flags on stage, Mr Xi defended the system as having worked in protecting Hong Kong’s prosperity and stability as well as China’s “fundamental interests” in the past 25 years.

    “‘One country two systems’ has been tested and proved time and again, and there is no reason to change such a good system,” he said, to applause from the audience comprising mostly of the city’s pro-Beijing elite.

    He added the system had the “unanimous endorsement” of residents along with “widespread approval” by the international community, and that Hong Kong’s “true democracy began” when it returned to China.

    But over the years Hong Kong has seen huge protests and many, including Western countries, have criticised Beijing’s growing interference in the city.

    In 2020, China introduced a controversial national security law that has clamped down on free speech and dissent in Hong Kong. This prompted Britain to accuse China of violating the “one country two systems” principle and their agreement.

    “We’re not giving up on Hong Kong,” UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson said on Friday.

    “Twenty-five years ago we made a promise to the territory and its people and we intend to keep it, doing all we can to hold China to its commitments so that Hong Kong is once again run by the people of Hong Kong, for the people of Hong Kong.”

    China’s recent electoral reforms designed to ensure only “patriots” can run for office in Hong Kong have also been heavily criticised.

    But Mr Xi strongly defended this move on Friday, saying that it was “essential for safeguarding the long-term stability and security of Hong Kong” and that “at no time should this principle be allowed to be compromised”.

    “No people in any country or region in the world would ever allow political power to fall into the hands of forces or individuals who do not love, or would even sell out or betray, their own country,” he said.

    Government Flying Services aircrafts display the People's Republic of China and the Hong Kong SAR flags over the Convention Centre in Hong Kong, China, 01 July 2022
    IMAGE SOURCE,EPA Image caption, Helicopters carrying the flags of China and Hong Kong flew across the city on Friday morning

    At the same event, Mr Xi also formally appointed John Lee, a former security chief known for his tough pro-Beijing views, as the new chief executive of Hong Kong.

    Mr Lee had got the top job through an uncontested election – a sore point for many Hongkongers who say China has gone back on its promise to make the process fully democratic eventually.

    Mr Lee’s new 21-member cabinet was also sworn in. It is heavily staffed by pro-Beijing leaders, including three who have been sanctioned by the US for “undermining Hong Kong’s autonomy and restricting the freedom of expression or assembly” of its people.

    Various official events celebrating the handover will be held across the city on Friday, a public holiday. They typically culminate in a firework display over Victoria Harbour.

    Mr Xi’s visit this year – the first to Hong Kong since the 20th anniversary celebrations in 2017 – has led to the city deploying plainclothes officers and “special constables” drafted from prison guards and immigration forces, reports BBC Chinese’s Martin Yip.

    An Omicron outbreak earlier this year in Hong Kong fuelled doubts over whether Mr Xi, who has personally championed China’s zero Covid policy, would cancel his visit.

    But he arrived in Hong Kong on Thursday via a high-speed train and met outgoing chief executive Carrie Lam.

    Police stand guard on a street in Hong Kong on July 1, 2022, during the 25th anniversary of the city's handover from Britain to China
    IMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGES Image caption, Security personnel have been deployed across the city for the handover anniversary

    Source: BBC

  • Hong Kong reports ‘first case’ of virus reinfection

    Hong Kong scientists are reporting the case of a healthy man in his 30s who became reinfected with coronavirus four and a half months after his first bout.

    They say genome sequencing shows the two strains of the virus are “clearly different”, making it the world’s first proven case of reinfection.

    The World Health Organization warns it is important not to jump to conclusions based on the case of one patient.

    And experts say reinfections may be rare and not necessarily serious.

    There have been more than 23 million cases of coronavirus infection around the world.

    Those infected develop an immune response as their bodies fight off the virus which helps to protect them against it returning.

    The strongest immune response has been found in the most seriously ill patients.

    But it is still not clear how strong this protection or immunity is – or how long it lasts.

    And the World Health Organization said larger studies over time of people who had previously had coronavirus were needed to find out more.

    This report, by the University of Hong Kong, due to be published in Clinical Infectious Diseases, says the man spent 14 days in hospital before recovering from the virus but then, despite having no further symptoms, tested positive for the virus a second time, following a saliva test during airport screening.

    “This is a very rare example of reinfection,” said Brendan Wren, professor of microbial pathogenesis, at London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.

    “And it should not negate the global drive to develop Covid-19 vaccines.

    “It is to be expected that the virus will naturally mutate over time.”

    Dr Jeffrey Barrett, senior scientific consultant for the Covid-19 genome project at the Wellcome Sanger Institute, said: “Given the number of global infections to date, seeing one case of reinfection is not that surprising even if it is a very rare occurrence.

    “It may be that second infections, when they do occur, are not serious – though we don’t know whether this person was infectious during their second episode.”

    Prof Paul Hunter, from the University of East Anglia, said more information about this and other cases of reinfection was needed “before we can really understand the implications”.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Hong Kong activist Joshua Wong says ‘resistance will continue’

    Hong Kong‘s democracy camp will continue to fight Beijing’s crackdown on political freedoms, prominent dissident Joshua Wong said Friday after he and other activists were barred from standing for election.
    “Our resistance will continue on and we hope the world can stand with us in the upcoming uphill battle,” he told reporters.

    Dressed in a black T-shirt emblazoned with the words “They can’t kill us all”, 23-year-old Wong slammed authorities for disqualifying some of the city’s best-known democracy activists from standing in September’s legislative elections.

    “Beyond any doubt (this) is the most scandalous election fraud era in Hong Kong history,” he said.

    The disqualifications were the latest blow against the semi-autonomous city’s democracy movement, which has been under sustained attack from China’s Communist Party rulers.

    China imposed a national security law last month on Hong Kong outlawing subversion, which it warned was a “sword” hanging over the head of democracy protesters.

    On Thursday, 12 democracy activists were told they would not be allowed to stand for the partially elected legislature because of their previously stated political views.

    The democracy campaigners had been hoping to win a first-ever majority in the 70-seat legislature, which is deliberately weighted to return a pro-Beijing chamber.

    In a statement announcing its decision, Hong Kong’s government listed political views that required disqualification.

    They included criticising Beijing’s new security law, campaigning to win a legislation-blocking majority and refusing to recognise China’s sovereignty.

    But there are doubts over whether the election will even go ahead.

    Multiple local media outlets have reported this week that Hong Kong’s government will postpone the vote because of a recent surge in coronavirus cases. But there has been no confirmation yet from authorities.

    Hong Kong is a semi-autonomous city guaranteed certain freedoms and autonomy under a “One Country, Two Systems” deal agreed ahead of the 1997 handover from Britain.

    But Beijing’s new national security law has dramatically upended that unique status, the latest in a slew of measures that have eviscerated political freedoms in recent years.

    On Wednesday, four students — aged between 16 and 21 — were arrested for social media posts deemed to breach the new security law, the first to be made by a new dedicated police unit.

    The four were all former members of Student Localism, a pro-independence group that announced it was disbanding its Hong Kong branch the day before the security law was enacted.

    Police said they were arrested on suspicion of organising and inciting secession through comments made on social media posts after the law came in.

    Source: AFP

  • Student arrests in Hong Kong deepen white terror fears

    Hong Kong has fallen into an era of “white terror”, democracy campaigners said Thursday after four students – one aged just 16 – were arrested for social media posts deemed to be a threat to China’s national security. Wednesday’s arrests were the first made by Hong Kong police’s new national security unit, which was set up after Beijing imposed a controversial law last month aimed at quashing the city’s democracy movement.

    The arrests added to a deepening sense of dread in Hong Kong that its cherished freedoms on speech — once thought to be guaranteed under a “One China, Two Systems” model — are on the way to being eviscerated.

    The four arrested were former members of Student Localism, a pro-independence group that announced it was disbanding the day before the new national security law was enacted.

    Police said the three males and one female — aged between 16 and 21 — were arrested on suspicion of organising and inciting secession through comments made on social media posts after the law came in.

    “They wanted to unite all the independent groups in Hong Kong for the view to promote the independence of Hong Kong,” Li Kwai-wah, from the police’s new national security unit, told reporters.

    Footage posted online showed plainclothes police leading Tony Chung, the 19-year-old former leader of Student Localism, being detained with his hands tied behind his back.

    Student and rights groups condemned the arrests, saying they heralded the kind of political suppression ubiquitous on the authoritarian Chinese mainland.

    “Hong Kong has fallen into the era of white terror,” the Student Unions of Higher Institutions, which represents 13 student unions, said in a statement overnight.

    “It is crystal clear that more and more Hongkongers (will) have to endure… Communist terror,” it added.

    Nathan Law, a democracy campaigner who went into exile after the law was imposed, expressed similar sentiments on Twitter.

    “White terror, politics of fear dispersed in Hong Kong,” referencing a Chinese idiom to describe political persecution.

    Online crackdown In an overnight statement, Hong Kong police warned people could commit crimes by what they write online.

    “Police remind the public that the cyber world of the Internet is not a virtual space beyond the law,” the force said.

    “Anyone who commits an unlawful act, whether in the real or in the cyber world, is liable to criminal prosecution.”

    Sophie Richardson, a China expert with Human Rights Watch, said Beijing’s new legislation was being wielded against peaceful political speech.

    “The gross misuse of this draconian law makes clear that the aim is to silence dissent, not protect national security,” she said.

    The security law gave China’s Community Party rulers far more direct control over Hong Kong, which was supposedly guaranteed 50 years of freedoms as part of 1997 handover from Britain.

    But last year the city was rocked by seven straight months of huge and often violent pro-democracy protests.

    Beijing said the national security law was needed to end that unrest and restore stability, describing it as a “sword” hanging over the heads of lawbreakers.

    It targets four types of crime: subversion, secession, terrorism and colluding with foreign forces — with up to life in prison.

    Crushing dissent Critics, including many western nations, say it has demolished the “One Country, Two Systems” model.

    The law bypassed Hong Kong’s legislature and its details were kept secret until the moment it was enacted.

    It empowers China’s security agents to operate openly in the city for the first time.

    Beijing has also said it will have jurisdiction for especially serious cases, toppling the legal firewall that has existed since the handover between Hong Kong’s independent judiciary and the Chinese mainland’s party-controlled courts.

    China has also claimed it can prosecute anyone anywhere in the world for national security crimes.

    On the mainland Beijing routinely uses similar national security laws to crush dissent.

    The first arrests in Hong Kong came a day after the law was enacted against people who possessed pro-independence flags and slogans critical of Beijing — including a 15-year-old girl.

    At least 15 people have now been arrested under the new law since it was enacted on June 30.

    Source: AFP

  • Hong Kong implements tough coronavirus restrictions

    Hong Kong is on the verge of a “large-scale” outbreak that could overwhelm hospitals, its leader warned Wednesday, as authorities implemented their toughest social distancing measures yet. From Wednesday all residents in the densely packed city of 7.5 million must wear masks when they leave their homes while restaurants can only serve take-out meals.

    No more than two people from different households can gather in public with fines of up to $HK5,000 ($625) for those who breach the new emergency rules.

    The latest measures are a bid to stifle a sudden spike in coronavirus cases that have upended the city’s otherwise enviable battle against the deadly disease.

    More than 1,000 infections have been confirmed since early July — more than 40 percent of the total since the virus first hit the city in late January.

    New daily infections have been above 100 for the last six days.

    “We are on the verge of a large-scale community outbreak, which may lead to a collapse of our hospital system and cost lives, especially of the elderly,” chief executive Carrie Lam said in a statement released on Wednesday to coincide with the new measures.

    “In order to protect our loved ones, our healthcare staff and Hong Kong, I appeal to you to follow strictly the social distancing measures and stay at home as far as possible,” she added.

    Hong Kong was one of the first places hit by the coronavirus when it emerged from China at the start of the year.

    It initially had remarkable success in controlling the outbreak — helped in part by a health-conscious public embracing face masks and an efficient track and trace programme, forged in the fires of the deadly SARS virus in 2003.

    By June local transmission had all but ended.

    But the virus later snuck back into the city and began spreading.

    Health officials have been scrambling to uncover the source of the latest outbreak.

    Some have blamed exemptions from the usual 14-day quarantine which the government granted to “essential personnel”, including cross-boundary truckers, air and sea crew and some manufacturing executives.

    The government has since tightened restrictions for some of those groups.

    It has also announced plans to build a temporary 2,000-bed field hospital near the airport, something Chinese authorities have offered to help with.

    The latest lockdown measures are a new body blow for a city that was already mired in recession thanks to the US-China trade war and last year’s months of political unrest.

    Source: AFP

  • Microsoft and Zoom join Hong Kong data ‘pause’

    Microsoft and Zoom have said they will not process data requests made by the Hong Kong authorities while they take stock of a new security law.

    They follow Facebook, Google, Twitter and the chat app Telegram, which had already announced similar “pauses” in compliance over the past two days.

    China passed the law on 30 June, criminalising acts that support independence, making it easier to punish protesters.

    Apple says it is “assessing” the rules.

    If the tech firms make their non-compliance policies permanent, they could face restrictions or a ban on their services in the semi-autonomous region.

    And while Facebook, Google, Twitter and Telegram’s services are blocked in mainland China, the same is not true of Microsoft, Zoom and Apple.

    In a related development, TikTok – which is owned by the Chinese firm Bytedance – has said it plans to exit Hong Kong within days.

    The business had previously said it would not comply with Chinese government requests to access TikTok users’ data. It operates a similar service called Douyin in its home market, which could theoretically become a substitute. However, Bytedance has indicated it does not have plans to do so at this time.

    ‘Seeking guidance’

    Microsoft directly offers its Office 365 work app and LinkedIn social networks to both Hong Kong residents and citizens in mainland China.

    But while Office 365 is provided directly by the firm to Hong Kong residents, the service is run by a local firm 21Vianet on the other side of the border, allowing Microsoft to remain one step removed.

    In the case of LinkedIn, law enforcement data requests have to go via the US government, although the division says it does sometimes “make an exception in an emergency”.

    According to Microsoft’s latest transparency report, it received requests for data linked to 81 accounts from Hong Kong’s government between July and December 2019, and provided “non-content data” in most cases.

    “As we would with any new legislation, we are reviewing the new law to understand its implications,” said a spokesman for the American firm.

    “In the past, we’ve typically received only a relatively small number of requests from Hong Kong authorities, but we are pausing our responses to these requests as we conduct our review.”

    The video chat provider Zoom is based in the US, but has ties to China.

    Its founder and chief executive Eric Yuan was born in Tai’an before emigrating to Silicon Valley 23 years ago.

    Most of its product development workers are based in mainland China.

    And it recently made headlines for:

    suspending the account of a group of US-based activists, who had held a meeting on the platform to commemorate the Tiananmen Square crackdown. Zoom acknowledged it did this at the behest of Beijing routing some non-China-based users’ video calls via computer servers based in the country, which it said had happened by mistake “Zoom supports the free and open exchange of thoughts and ideas,” a spokeswoman said in response to the latest development.

    “We are proud to facilitate meaningful conversations and professional collaboration around the world.

    “We’re actively monitoring the developments in Hong Kong SAR [Special Administrative Region], including any potential guidance from the US government. We have paused processing any data requests from, and related to, Hong Kong SAR.”

    US treaty

    Apple uses end-to-end encryption to protect Messages and Facetime conversations carried out by Hong Kong residents, meaning only the device owners can unscramble the messages transmitted.

    However, the firm does hold encryption keys to data stored in users’ iCloud accounts, which can include back-ups of their text-based chats.

    In theory, this means it could pass this information to the authorities if demanded.

    However, since both the keys and the data are stored in the States, it says the US government has the power to intervene.

    “Apple has always required that all content requests from local law enforcement authorities be submitted through the Mutual Legal Assistance Treaty in place between the United States and Hong Kong,” it said.

    “As a result, Apple doesn’t receive content requests directly from the Hong Kong government. Under the MLAT process, the US Department of Justice reviews Hong Kong authorities’ requests for legal conformance.

    “We’re assessing the new law, which went into effect less than a week ago, and we have not received any content requests since the law went into effect.”

    Apple has, however, complied with requests in the past.

    Its latest transparency report indicates it received requests for data concerning 358 devices from Hong Kong’s government between January and June, and that it provided data in 91% of the cases.

    In mainland China, users’ iCloud files are stored in a data centre controlled by a local firm, so the government does not need to involve the US authorities when seeking access.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Hong Kong: First arrests under ‘anti-protest’ law as handover marked

    Hong Kong police have made their first arrests under a new “anti-protest” law imposed by Beijing, as crowds marked 23 years since the end of British rule.

    Nine people were held accused of violating the law, including a man with a pro-independence flag. More than 300 others were detained at a banned rally.

    The national security law targets secession, subversion and terrorism with punishments up to life in prison.

    Activists say it erodes freedoms but China has dismissed the criticism.

    Hong Kong’s sovereignty was handed back to China by Britain in 1997 and certain rights were supposed to be guaranteed for at least 50 years under the “one country, two systems” agreement.

    The UK has now said up to three million Hong Kong residents will be offered the chance to settle in the UK and ultimately apply for citizenship.

    Police used water cannon, tear gas and pepper spray on demonstrators. One officer was stabbed in the arm by “rioters holding sharp objects”, police said. The suspects fled and bystanders offered no help, they added.

    One of the nine arrested under the new law, adopted in the wake of last year’s widespread unrest, was holding a “Hong Kong Independence” flag. However, some Twitter users said the picture appeared to show a small “no to” written in front of the slogan. The man has not been identified, and it was not clear whether he would be prosecuted.

    The legislation has been condemned by numerous countries and human rights activists.

    UK Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab called the measures a “flagrant assault” on freedoms of speech and protest.

    The UK has also updated its travel advice on Hong Kong, saying there is an “increased risk of detention, and deportation for a non-permanent resident”.

    US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said China had broken its promise to Hong Kong’s people.

    But in Beijing, foreign ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian urged countries to look at the situation objectively and said China would not allow foreign interference in its domestic affairs.

    What does the new law say? Crimes of secession, subversion, terrorism and collusion with foreign forces are punishable by a minimum sentence of three years, with the maximum being life. It also says:

    Damaging public transport facilities – which often happened during the 2019 protests – can be considered terrorism Beijing will establish a new security office in Hong Kong, with its own law enforcement personnel – neither of which would come under the local authority’s jurisdiction Inciting hatred of China’s central government and Hong Kong’s regional government are now offences under Article 29 The law can also be broken from abroad by non-residents under Article 38, and this could mean that foreigners could be arrested on arrival in Hong Kong Some trials will be heard behind closed doors Beijing will also have power over how the law should be interpreted, and not any Hong Kong judicial or policy body. If the law conflicts with any Hong Kong law, the Beijing law takes priority.

    Mr Zhang said the law would not be applied to offences committed before it was passed and that suspects arrested in Hong Kong on charges of violating the law may be tried on the mainland.

    Chief Executive Carrie Lam, Hong Kong’s pro-Beijing leader, said the law would “restore stability” and that it was “considered the most important development in relations between the central government and Hong Kong since the handover”.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Hong Kong security law: Life sentences for breaking law

    People in Hong Kong could face life in jail for breaking a controversial and sweeping new security law imposed by China.

    The legislation came into force on Tuesday but the full text was only revealed hours afterwards.

    It was brought in by Beijing following increasing unrest and a widening pro-democracy movement.

    Critics say the new law effectively curtails protest and undermines Hong Kong’s freedoms.

    Hong Kong’s leader, Carrie Lam, defended the law, saying it filled a “gaping hole” in national security.

    Details have been closely guarded and the Beijing-backed politician admitted she had not seen the draft before commenting.

    The UK, EU and Nato have all expressed concern and anger, while pro-democracy groups have started to disband amid fears of immediate reprisals.

    Source: bbc.com

  • China to handle some Hong Kong national security cases – Official

    China will have jurisdiction over “some extremely rare” national security cases in Hong Kong, a senior official said Monday as Beijing prepares to unveil its new anti-subversion law for the semi-autonomous business hub.

    The revelation comes just three days ahead of a major meeting of the country’s top lawmaking body. Beijing has signalled the new law – which will bypass the city’s legislature – needs to be passed quickly following a year of pro-democracy protests.

    Deng Zhonghua, deputy head of China’s Hong Kong and Macau Affairs Office, said enforcing the national security law would largely fall to Hong Kong’s local authorities and police.

    “However, the central authorities should also reserve jurisdiction over some extremely rare cases when an offence takes place in Hong Kong and poses a serious threat to China’s national security,” Deng said.

    Under a “One Country, Two Systems” agreement ahead of the handover by Britain, China said it would let Hong Kong maintain certain liberties and autonomy until 2047, including legislative and judicial independence.

    But Deng’s comments are the first time a Beijing official has made clear that mainland authorities will have jurisdiction over some national security cases once the law is passed.

    Hong Kong was rocked by months of huge and often violent pro-democracy protests last year.

    In response, Beijing has announced plans to impose the new law covering subversion, secession, terrorism and foreign influence.

    Beijing says the law will return stability and leave political freedoms intact, and that Hong Kong’s legislature has failed to pass its own national security laws over the years.

    Political oppression fears

    But opponents – including many Western nations – fear it will bring mainland-style political oppression, given how anti-subversion laws are routinely used to crush dissent in authoritarian China.

    They also fear it will start the erosion of Hong Kong’s legislative and judicial autonomy, the bedrock of the city’s success as a major international business hub.

    Beijing’s rubber-stamp parliament has previously said the law will allow mainland security agencies to publicly operate in Hong Kong for the first time.

    Deng gave further details on Monday.

    “Both the central government and the Hong Kong government need to set up an organisation dedicated to safeguarding national security,” he said in a speech to the semi-official Chinese Association of Hong Kong and Macao Studies think-tank.

    Central authorities, he added, would help “supervise and instruct” local authorities on enforcing national security.

    “The central authorities must have practical means to handle national security cases in Hong Kong and must be able to create an effective deterrence, instead of being satisfied with just chanting slogans and making gestures,” Deng said.

    Deng said he recognised there were differences in the legal systems of Hong Kong and mainland China.

    But he said the new law would reflect common principles, including that the law would not be retroactive, as well as the presumption of innocence.

    Disclaimer : “Opinions expressed in this article are the sole responsibility of the author(s) and do not in any way reflect those of tigpost.co. Our outfit will hereby not be liable for any inaccuracies contained in this article.”

    Source: france24.com

  • Tens of thousands defy ban to attend Tiananmen vigil

    Tens of thousands of demonstrators in Hong Kong have defied a ban to stage a mass vigil for the victims of the 1989 Tiananmen Square crackdown in Beijing.

    Officers erected barricades around the city’s Victoria Park, but some pro-democracy protesters knocked them down and held candlelit gatherings.

    Police banned the vigil this year, citing Coronavirus measures.

    Earlier, lawmakers approved a controversial bill making it a crime to insult China’s national anthem.

    Ahead of the vote, two legislators were taken away by security guards after throwing a foul-smelling liquid on to the chamber floor.

    They said they were protesting against China’s growing control over Hong Kong, and also marking the Tiananmen Square anniversary.

    The latest events come as the Chinese government is drawing up a new security law for Hong Kong, a move that threatens to raise tensions even further.

    Why was the Tiananmen vigil banned?

    Hong Kong and Macau are the only parts of China that have been allowed to mark the killings.

    An annual vigil has been held in Hong Kong since 1990. On the mainland, references to the crackdown are banned, and the government mentions it rarely – if at all.

    On 4 June 1989, troops and tanks opened fire on pro-democracy protesters in Beijing – estimates of the dead vary from a few hundred to several thousand.

    Tens of thousands of people normally mark the anniversary in Hong Kong, but police told local media that 3,000 riot officers would be deployed to stop smaller or impromptu commemorations.

    At Victoria Park, demonstrators shouted pro-democracy slogans including “Stand with Hong Kong” and “End one-party rule”, referring to the Communist Party’s monopoly on power in China.

    “I’ve come here for the vigil for 30 years in memory of the victims of the June 4 crackdown, but this year it is more significant to me,” one 74-year-old man told AFP news agency.

    “Because Hong Kong is experiencing the same kind of repression from the same regime, just like what happened in Beijing.”

    Candlelit vigils also took place in other parts of Hong Kong. Hundreds gathered in Mong Kok district, where there were brief scuffles between protesters who attempted to set up barricades and police who used pepper spray to disperse them, Reuters reported.

    It was the first time there had been unrest at a Tiananmen vigil in Hong Kong, the news agency said. Police said they had made several arrests.

    In Mong Kok, Brenda Hui held a white battery-illuminated umbrella that read “Never Forget June 4”.

    “We are afraid this will be the last time we can have a ceremony but Hong Kongers will always remember what happened on June 4,” she said.

    Groups of up to eight are allowed to gather in Hong Kong under the territory’s virus rules. But police sources told the South China Morning Post that if different groups gathered for a “common purpose”, they would be moved on.

    The US and Taiwan have both called on China to apologise for the Tiananmen crackdown.

    “Around the world, there are 365 days in a year. Yet in China, one of those days is purposely forgotten each year,” Taiwan’s President Tsai Ing-wen tweeted. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo tweeted a photo of him meeting prominent Tiananmen survivors.

    China’s foreign ministry said the calls were “complete nonsense”.

    “The great achievements since the founding of new China over the past 70 or so years fully demonstrates that the developmental path China has chosen is completely correct,” spokesman Zhao Lijian told reporters.

    Source: bbc.com

  • UK to change immigration rules for Hong Kong citizens if China passes law

    Britain will change its immigration rules and offer millions of people in Hong Kong “a route to citizenship” if China imposes new security laws, Boris Johnson has said.

    Writing in the Times, Mr Johnson said the UK would “have no choice” but to uphold its ties with the territory.

    China is facing mounting criticism over its planned law.

    Many people in Hong Kong fear it could end their unique freedoms, which the rest of China does not have.

    The UK is already in talks with allies including the US and Australia about what to do if China imposes the new law – which would make it a crime to undermine Beijing’s authority – and people start fleeing Hong Kong.

    In the Times on Wednesday, the prime minister confirmed that if China passes the law, people in Hong Kong who hold British National (Overseas) (BNO) passports will be allowed to come to the UK for 12 months without a visa. Currently they are allowed to come for six months.

    Around 350,000 people in Hong Kong currently already have a BNO passport, but 2.6 million others are also eligible.

    Passport-holders would also be given further immigration rights, including the right to work.

    This “could place them on a route to citizenship,” Mr Johnson said.

    ‘Britain will not walk away’
    The prime minister added that the immigration changes “would amount to one of the biggest changes in our visa system in British history”.

    “If it proves necessary, the British government will take this step and take it willingly.

    “Many people in Hong Kong fear their way of life, which China pledged to uphold, is under threat.

    “If China proceeds to justify their fears, then Britain could not in good conscience shrug our shoulders and walk away; instead we will honour our obligations and provide an alternative.”

    The last British governor of Hong Kong, Lord Patten, said the offer of support from the UK government was “morally and politically right”.

    He accused China’s ruling Communist Party of employing “bullying” tactics, adding: “Sooner or later with a bully you have to stand up to them, otherwise you’ll get knocked about.”

    Asked whether the UK was entering a new Cold War with China, Lord Patten told the BBC’s World at One: “I think we’re entering a period of realism with China…

    “This is not us against China, it’s the way in which the Chinese Communist regime can’t stand us, and they’ve cracked down on Hong Kong because it represents all the things which [President] Xi Jinping dislikes.”

    Hong Kong is a former British colony. It was handed back to China in 1997.

    As part of an agreement signed at the time, it enjoys some freedoms not seen in mainland China – and these are set out in a mini-constitution called the Basic Law.

    BNO passports were granted to all Hong Kong citizens born before the Chinese handover in 1997 and while they allow the holder some protection from the UK foreign service they do not currently give the right to live or work in Britain.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Hong Kong security bill backed by China’s parliament

    China’s parliament has backed a new security law for Hong Kong which would make it a crime to undermine Beijing’s authority in the territory.

    The bill – which now passes to China’s senior leadership – has caused deep concern among those who say it could end Hong Kong’s unique status.

    It could also see China installing its own security agencies in the region for the first time.

    The move has already sparked a new wave of anti-mainland protest.

    Clashes broke out on Wednesday as Hong Kong’s parliament debated a different proposed law, which would make it a crime to disrespect the Chinese national anthem. Hundreds of people were arrested in protests over that and the security law.

    Security remains high on Thursday, as a tense debate in the Legislative Council continues.

    At least two pro-democracy legislators were ejected from the council on Thursday. One lawmaker, Ted Hui, threw rotten plants on to the floor of the chamber, saying it symbolised the decay of Hong Kong’s political system.

    “I want the speaker to feel what is meant by rotten,” he said.

    The speaker deemed the package to be an “unknown dangerous object”, and called police and fire crews.

    What has the reaction been?

    Full details about exactly what behaviour will be outlawed under the new law are not yet clear. It is due to be enacted before September.

    But hours before the bill was passed, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said developments in Hong Kong meant it could no longer be considered to have “a high degree of autonomy” from mainland China.

    That meant that Hong Kong no longer merited being treated differently from the mainland under US law.

    The declaration could have major implications for Hong Kong’s trade hub status and is likely to anger Beijing.

    What happens next?

    The National People’s Congress (NPC) – meeting in Beijing after a two-month delay caused by the coronavirus pandemic – backed the security bill resolution with 2,878 votes in favour, one against and six abstentions.

    “It will uphold and improve the ‘one country, two systems’ policy,” NPC chairman Li Zhanshu told delegates during the closing ceremony.

    “It is in line with the constitution and Hong Kong’s Basic Law and is in the interest of all Chinese people including Hong Kong people,” he added.

    The NPC only ever approves legislation put to it by the government so there was no chance the bill would not be supported.

    The bill – referred to as the Draft Decision – now passes to the Standing Committee of the Communist Party which will draw up the full details of the new law.

    It is expected to criminalise:

    -secession – breaking away from the country

    -subversion – undermining the power or authority of the central government

    -terrorism – using violence or intimidation against people

    -activities by foreign forces that interfere in Hong Kong

    The bill also says that “when needed, relevant national security organs of the Central People’s Government will set up agencies in Hong Kong to fulfil relevant duties to safeguard national security in accordance with the law”.

    That means China could potentially have its own law enforcement agencies in Hong Kong, alongside the city’s own.

    The authorities in Hong Kong insist the law is essential to tackle growing violence and “terrorism”, and that the territory’s residents have nothing to fear from it.

    Critics fear it could lead to Hong Kongers being prosecuted – even retroactively – for criticising their or the mainland’s leadership, joining protests or exercising their current rights under local laws.

    Why did China do this? Hong Kong was handed back to China from British control in 1997, but under a unique agreement – a mini-constitution called the Basic Law and a so-called “one country, two systems” principle.

    They are supposed to protect certain freedoms for Hong Kong: freedom of assembly and speech, an independent judiciary and some democratic rights – freedoms that no other part of mainland China has.

    Under the same agreement, Hong Kong had to enact its own national security law – this was set out in Article 23 of the Basic Law.

    But its unpopularity meant it had never been done – the government tried in 2003 but had to back down after protests.

    Then, last year, protests over an extradition law turned violent and evolved into a broader anti-China and pro-democracy movement.

    China is keen to avoid a repeat of that unrest.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Hong Kong pushing to make ‘insult of Chinese anthem’ a crime punishable by up to three years in prison

    After five months of being at the forefront of the coronavirus pandemic, new infections in Hong Kong have slowed to a trickle, and the city is slowly getting back to normal. Which, these days, means protests.

    Many are not waiting for the final coronavirus restrictions to be lifted. During protests over the weekend, police arrested some 230 people on a variety of charges, including unlawful assembly and refusing to abide by social distancing regulations.

    Such disturbances are only likely to increase, with summer being the city’s traditional protest season around the key anniversaries of June 4, for the Tiananmen Square massacre, and July 1, which marks Hong Kong’s handover to Chinese control, as well as a host of new key dates created by last year’s protests.
    The government has attempted to wield public opinion against the protesters, pointing out that people are already hurting economically from the coronavirus crisis and now is not the time for further public disturbance. The heavy police response to initial protests also seems designed to dissuade anyone on the fence from joining in.

    At the same time, however, the government is pushing ahead with a piece of legislation that — like the extradition bill that kicked off last year’s protests — has sparked concern among moderate Hong Kongers about increasing Chinese encroachment and undermining of the city’s political freedoms.

    On Tuesday, the government said lawmakers will resume debate on the Chinese national anthem bill on May 27. The proposed law will make it a crime punishable by up to three years in prison “to insult the national anthem.”
    “The national anthem is the symbol and sign of the country,” Matthew Cheung, Hong Kong’s chief secretary and number two official, said in a statement. “(The purpose of the law) is to preserve the dignity of the national anthem so that members of the community would respect the national anthem.”

    Hong Kong is part of China, but the semi-autonomous city has its own legal and political system, with limited democracy and greater personal freedoms than on the mainland. The city competes as itself in many arenas, such as the Olympics and international football matches, but uses China’s national anthem, “March of the Volunteers,” which is also played at official ceremonies.

    The proposed law mirrors legislation passed in Beijing in September 2017, amid widespread anger in the mainland at Hong Kong football fans booing the country’s national anthem during international matches.

    But it has taken almost three years for the same rules to be applied in Hong Kong. That is despite it being added to Annex III of Hong Kong’s Basic Law, the city’s de facto constitution, which requires the city’s government to apply the national anthem law locally “by way of promulgation or legislation.”

    Per Article 18 of the Basic Law, “laws listed in Annex III … shall be confined to those relating to defense and foreign affairs as well as other matters outside the limits of the autonomy of the Region.” Previous laws introduced in Hong Kong by law of Annex III include regulations regarding China’s exclusive economic zone, which has an effect on territorial claims in the South China Sea, and legislation regarding foreign banks.

    That this can be applied to cover legislation regulating the country’s national anthem shows the fairly broad remit Beijing sees the law as providing. What checks exist on this ability are only really provided by the Hong Kong legislature, and the local government’s previously stated commitment to allowing lawmakers to debate such laws rather than simply promulgating them unilaterally.

    Nor is Annex III the only way the Chinese government can influence laws in the semi-autonomous city, beyond its appointment of Hong Kong’s leader and influence on pro-Beijing lawmakers. The NPC can also issue “interpretations” of constitutional issues, such as in 2016, when it intervened in a debate over oath-taking to rule that lawmakers who had staged protests during their swearing-in ceremony had voided their election and were barred from taking their seats.

    Hong Kong’s legislature began debating the national anthem law early last year, before the protests over the extradition bill brought all procedures to a stop and shut down the legislature for several months. In its statement Tuesday, the government said it wanted to pass the law before the current legislative session ends in July and any outstanding work becomes defunct, meaning the entire process would have to start over again.

    Passage of the law seems inevitable without the kind of radical action taken by protesters last year to block the extradition bill. Opposition lawmakers do not have the numbers to block the law, and while filibustering and other procedural tactics have succeeded in slowing it in the committee stage, they have largely run their course.
    Once law, it will be illegal to misuse or insult “March of the Volunteers,” with offenders subject to a fine of up to $6,450 (50,000 HKD), and three years in prison. Schoolchildren, including those at international schools, would also be legally required to learn the anthem, which opens with the line, “Arise, we who refuse to be slaves!”

    Multiple legal and human rights bodies have criticized the law for undermining freedom of expression and contravening Hong Kong’s constitutional protections.

    Both the Hong Kong Bar Association and the Progressive Lawyer’s Group (PLG), which represent legal professionals in the city, raised concerns that the wording of the law left it open to abuse and uncertainty, with the PLG saying in a statement that it is “poorly drafted and appallingly lacking in clarity.”

    A joint statement from 38 Hong Kong civil society groups warned the law “could have chilling effects on dissent and become a tool for the government to suppress opposition.”

    A spokesman for Hong Kong’s Constitutional and Mainland Affairs Bureau said Tuesday that the spirit of the bill was “respect,” adding that a person would only commit an offense if they publicly and intentionally insulted the national anthem. He denied that the law was “draconian” or that there was any risk of “suppressing the freedom of speech.”

    Government officials have previously said they hope not to see any prosecutions, that the law itself would be sufficient to engender “respect” for the anthem, a suggestion ridiculed by opposition lawmakers.

    “Respect cannot be won via legislation,” pro-democracy lawmaker Claudia Mo told CNN last year. “Respect has to be won by oneself. You cannot threaten and force others to respect you unwillingly.”

    Nor are protesters who have regularly taken to using the phrase “Chinazi” and defacing the Chinese flag during demonstrations likely to stand and salute as “March of the Volunteers” plays.

    If and when the bill passes, its revocation will likely become another protest demand, as anti-government unrest will inevitably kick into high gear again.

    The stakes are substantially higher this year, with legislative elections in September. While Hong Kong’s parliament is not fully democratically elected, the opposition is hoping it can build on a landslide victory in last year’s local elections to squeak a bare majority in the higher chamber, the first time this has ever happened under Chinese rule.

    With Beijing increasingly asserting its control over Hong Kong affairs however — including hinting at expelling or barring more lawmakers from election — the national anthem law could become a key tool in avoiding any further electoral humiliation.

    Source: cnn.com

  • Coronavirus: Two new infections end Hong Kong’s 24-day clean sheet

    Two people in Hong Kong tested positive for coronavirus, officials said Wednesday, ending a 24-day run of no new local cases that saw the city begin to ease social distancing regulations.

    The financial hub was on course for 28-days of no local transmissions – a yardstick often used by epidemiologists to judge if an outbreak has been defeated.

    But on Wednesday officials said a 66-year-old woman and her five-year-old granddaughter had tested positive for the virus.

    Investigators described them as local transmission cases, saying they were still trying to work out how the older woman had become infected.

    “She has no travel history. Her family has no travel history and they have no contact history with confirmed cases,” Dr Chaung Shuk-kwan told reporters, adding officials were planning to test neighbours.

    For the last three weeks the only new cases have been in 24 people arriving from overseas, who were placed in quarantine.

    The new infections will raise fears that a new outbreak could still occur.

    Despite its close proximity and links to mainland China, Hong Kong has kept infections to around 1,000 people with four deaths using intensive testing and contract tracing.

    The city has avoided the kind of harsh lockdowns seen elsewhere.

    On Friday authorities began easing many social distancing measures with the re-opening of bars, gyms and cinemas after a three-week closure.

    The threat of renewed outbreaks is a persistent worry for governments trying to balance public health with protecting badly battered economies.

    South Korea, which has also been held up as a model for defeating the virus, has seen more than 100 new cases emerge this week with a cluster linked to a Seoul nightclub district.

    Source: france24.com

  • Hong Kong to lift major social restrictions as virus fades

    Hong Kong on Tuesday announced plans to ease major social distancing measures, including reopening schools, cinemas, bars and beauty parlours after the Chinese territory largely halted local transmission of the deadly Coronavirus.

    The relaxation, which comes into effect Friday, will be a boost for a city mired in a deep recession following months of virus restrictions as well as anti-government protests that have battered the economy.

    Authorities also unveiled plans to hand out reusable face masks to all 7.5 million city residents.

    Hong Kong recorded some of the earliest confirmed COVID-19 cases outside of mainland China but despite its close proximity and links with the mainland it has managed to keep infections to around 1,000 with four deaths.

    There have been no new confirmed infections in 10 of the last 16 days and the cases that have been recorded came from people arriving from overseas who are quickly quarantined.

    “I hope these measures will be a silver lining for citizens,” the city’s leader Carrie Lam told reporters Tuesday as she spelled out the easing of curbs.

    Older secondary students will start returning to classes from May 27 while younger children will resume school in the first half of June.

    But a ban on more than four people gathering in public or eating together in restaurants will be stepped up to eight.

    Many businesses that were ordered to close will be allowed to open once more, albeit with restrictions in place.

    Bars and restaurants will be permitted to operate but must ensure a distance of 1.5 metres between tables. Live music performances and dancing however will remain banned.

    Cinemas can start showing films to reduced crowds while gyms, beauty, massage and mahjong parlours will re-open with hygiene protocols in place such as the use of masks, hand sanitiser and temperature checks.

    Nightclubs and karaoke bars must stay closed.

    Lam and other officials sported a new type of mask made of fabric Tuesday that they said would be distributed to all residents in the coming weeks.

    When the virus first emerged, Hong Kongers started panic-buying masks as anger grew against the government for failing to stockpile enough supplies.

    Since then local production has been ramped up and masks are plentiful in pharmacies and shops.

    Source: france24.com

  • Hong Kong and Tokyo airports are handling coronavirus very differently. Which one has it right?

    Passing through airports in Hong Kong and Tokyo this week highlighted the differences in the approaches of the two Asian hubs in dealing with the novel coronavirus pandemic.

    Upon arrival at Hong Kong International Airport on Sunday, after disembarking directly onto the tarmac we were taken to a quarantine area on the lower level of the airport.

    There we underwent multiple health and security checks. My temperature was taken, I filled out a detailed questionnaire indicating I had not traveled to China, Italy, South Korea, or other coronavirus hotspots.

    Two quarantine officers gave me a checklist of instructions for after I left the airport, including that I take my temperature twice daily and immediately report any abnormal symptoms to the Department of Health.

    If I was to land in Hong Kong today, it would be even stricter.

    The local government announced this week that anyone arriving from a foreign country is required to self-quarantine for two weeks, and will likely be issued an electronic monitoring bracelet that will alert the authorities if they leave their home or hotel.

    Quarantine officers interview Will Ripley on arrival at Hong Kong International Airport on March 15.

    Quarantine officers interview Will Ripley on arrival at Hong Kong International Airport on March 15

    So far, Hong Kong’s intense measures appear to be containing the spread of the virus.

    Despite Hong Kong sharing a border with mainland China, the number of cases in the densely populated city remains at 167– although the city has seen a spike in cases this week, mostly imported by international travelers arriving from countries struggling to deal with the virus.

    Beyond the airport, it’s hard to spot someone in Hong Kong not wearing a mask. The city clearly learned painful lessons from the SARS outbreak of 2003, when some 300 Hong Kong citizens died.

    The health-monitoring checklist issued by Hong Kong Quarantine officers on Sunday March 15, advising to do a temperature twice daily and report any symptoms to the Department of Health.

    The health-monitoring checklist issued by Hong Kong Quarantine officers on Sunday March 15, advising to do a temperature twice daily and report any symptoms to the Department of Health

    Hong Kong acted early closing schools, public libraries and museums, and urging people to work from home, way back in February when it had relatively few cases. While the government didn’t go so far as to close bars and restaurants, when the virus arrived in Hong Kong many people took it upon themselves to stay home and avoid crowds.

    Nobody is taking any chances. In Tokyo it’s very different.

    Japan contrast

    When I arrived at Narita airport in Japan this week our plane pulled up to the gate as usual.

    I walked freely through the airport, more than 500 meters to the quarantine office where about 10 quarantine officers hastily tried to process everybody who came from my flight.

    Nobody took my temperature, although I did walk past a thermal camera scanning for elevated body temperatures. But it was a cold evening and many passengers were bundled up in coats that could have hindered the camera’s ability to get an accurate reading.

    My quarantine officer gave me forms to sign in English requesting that I remain in my home for 14 days, check my temperature daily, and avoid public transportation.

    These were simply requests, and are not being enforced. I am following the suggested protocol, but there is nothing to stop me from going anywhere I please.

    The document issued at Tokyo's Narita Airport on March 17 requesting arrivals to avoid public transportation and monitor their symptoms for 14 days.

    The document issued at Tokyo’s Narita Airport on March 17 requesting arrivals to avoid public transportation and monitor their symptoms for 14 days

    Other countries have declared a state of emergency and gone into lockdown, but Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has said the situation in Japan does not yet warrant his use of emergency powers.

    In Tokyo, while many schools are closed, some large gatherings are canceled, and an unprecedented number of people are working from home, most bars and restaurants are open, lots of people are using crowded public transport, and parents still take their children outside to play, usually without masks. There is plenty of toilet paper on supermarket shelves.

    In explaining why Japan is not on lockdown, Abe points to Japan’s relatively small number of confirmed cases, compared to other countries.

    It’s true the island nation of 125 million people has 873 confirmed cases, compared to 31,506 in Italy, 16,169 in Iran and 8,413 in South Korea.

    But there is a key difference between Japan and other nations with a skyrocketing infection count: Japan is testing a tiny fraction of people compared to many other countries.

    By March 17, Japan tested just 14,525 people, according to the Ministry of Health, although some of those people had been tested multiple times. By contrast, South Korea — a country that has managed to stabilize a huge outbreak — can test about 15,000 people a day.

    Japanese officials have said the country will ramp up its testing capacity to 8,000 people per day by the end of the month.

    For an ageing society, a significant and rapid spread of coronavirus could have a devastating impact.

    Widespread testing is the only way to know for sure if the calm in Tokyo is a true picture of the coronavirus situation in Japan — or if it is actually the calm before the storm.

    Source: CNN

  • Hong Kong tells people to avoid kissing pets

    Hong Kong authorities have warned pet owners to avoid kissing their pets after a dog belonging to a Covid-19 patient was confirmed to have the virus.

    The Hong Kong Agriculture, Fisheries and Conservation Department said the pet dog had “a low level of infection with the virus”, adding that it was likely a case of human-to-animal transmission.

    The dog – said to be a pomeranian – has not shown any signs of disease and is currently under quarantine.

  • Hong Kong protests: Knife attacker bites man’s ear after stabbing four

    Five people have been injured in a knife attack at the site of a pro-democracy protest in Hong Kong.

    The attack happened at the Cityplaza mall in the Tai Koo district on Hong Kong Island.

    The local hospital authority said four men and one woman were injured, with two in critical condition.

    One of the injured, a local councillor, had his ear partially bitten off by the as-yet unidentified male attacker, who was subdued by passersby in the mall.

    Witnesses said the Mandarin-speaking attacker drew a knife after a political argument with people in the mall, which was the site of pro-democracy protests earlier in the day.

    Read:Hong Kong police storm metro system after protests

    The local councillor, Andrew Chiu Ka-yin, reportedly was attempting to prevent the attacker leaving the scene when the man bit off a section of his ear. Witnesses said the attacker was badly beaten by passersby who intervened, before police arrested the man.

    One of the victims, a woman, told the South China Morning Post that the suspect drew a knife after arguing with her sister and her husband, who were also injured. The Hong Kong Free Press reported that that attacker was a Mandarin-speaking pro-Beijing supporter.

    Hong Kong has experienced five months of sometimes violent demonstrations by pro-democracy activists, who first took to the streets to protest against a bill that would have allowed extradition to mainland China, but evolved into a broader revolt against the way Hong Kong is administered by Beijing.

    The wave of pro-democracy protests continued this weekend, days after a high-profile activist, Joshua Wong, was banned from standing in local elections. Police fired tear gas on Sunday into crowds of demonstrators in the eastern suburb of Taikoo Shing, home to the Cityplaza where the stabbing occurred.

    Read:Police, govt condemn violence in Sunday Hong Kong protests

    With no end in sight, China’s leaders signalled last week that they were preparing to change how the mainland administered Hong Kong.

    Shen Chunyao, the director of the Hong Kong, Macau and Basic Law Commission, told reporters that officials were looking at ways to “perfect” how Hong Kong’s chief executive was appointed and removed. He did not elaborate on what exactly might change.

    Last month, the leader of one of Hong Kong’s largest pro-democracy groups was taken to hospital after being attacked, apparently with hammers. Photographs on social media showed Jimmy Sham of the Civil Human Rights Front lying in the street, covered in blood.

    From hospital, the activist said he “remained committed to the ideal of peaceful non-violence”.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Hong Kong police storm metro system after protests

    Hong Kong police have violently tackled suspected protesters after thousands marched in the city in defiance of a ban.

    Images show police hitting people with batons and using pepper spray on a train in Hong Kong’s underground metro.

    Police said they were called to the scene amid violence against citizens by “radical protesters”.

    However it is unclear if all those injured and arrested in the metro system were involved in demonstrations.

    Thousands of people took to the streets on Saturday to mark the fifth anniversary of China’s government banning full democratic elections in Hong Kong.

    Protesters lit fires, threw petrol bombs and attacked the parliament building.

    Read:Thousands of Hong Kongers brave rain to join anti-government rally

    In response, police used tear gas, rubber bullets and water cannon to disperse crowds, and fired live warning shots as they tried to clear the streets.

    The latest protests came just a day after the arrest of several key pro-democracy activists and lawmakers in China’s special administrative region.

    Hong Kong has now seen 13 successive weeks of demonstrations.

    The movement grew out of rallies against a controversial extradition bill – now suspended – which would have allowed criminal suspects to be sent to mainland China for trial.

    It has since become a broader pro-democracy movement in which clashes have grown more violent.

    What happened in Hong Kong’s metro? During protests, crowds gathered by Prince Edward and Mong Kok stations in Hong Kong’s Kowloon neighbourhood.

    Police said in a tweet that they responded at both sites after reports of “radical protesters” assaulting citizens and damaging property.

    In a statement, Hong Kong’s government also said some protesters had “committed arson and “hurled miscellaneous objects and iron railings” onto railway tracks, “completely disregarding the safety of other passengers”.

    Police Yolanda Yu told reporters that 40 people were subsequently arrested for unlawful assembly, criminal damage and the assault of police officers.

    But several people have complained about the excessive force used by authorities.

    “The train stopped. Police boarded and hit me twice with a baton,” an unnamed man told the South China Morning Post newspaper.

    Read:Hong Kong activists arrested: Joshua Wong and others charged

    “They didn’t arrest me. They were just venting their anger by hitting me,” he added.

    MTR, which operates the city’s metro line, told local media that three stations – Prince Edward, Mongkok and Kowloon Bay – had been closed as a result of the incident. It is unclear when they will reopen.

    What else happened on Saturday?

    Protesters took to the streets in the Wan Chai district, many joining a Christian march, while others demonstrated in the Causeway Bay shopping district in the pouring rain. Many carried umbrellas and wore face masks.

    Demonstrators – chanting “stand with Hong Kong” and “fight for freedom” – gathered outside government offices, the local headquarters of China’s People’s Liberation Army and the city’s parliament, known as the Legislative Council.

    In the Admiralty district, some protesters threw firebombs towards officers. Earlier, protesters had marched near the official residence of embattled leader Carrie Lam, who is the focal point of much of the anger.

    The riot police had erected barriers around key buildings, and fired tear gas and jets of blue-dyed water from water cannon. The coloured liquid is traditionally used to make it easier for police to identify protesters.

    The police later confirmed that two officers fired into the air during operations to clear protesters from the streets. Both officers fired one shot each when they felt their lives were threatened, the police department said.

    Eric, a 22-year-old student, told Reuters news agency: “Telling us not to protest is like telling us not to breathe. I feel it’s my duty to fight for democracy. Maybe we win, maybe we lose, but we fight.”

    The recent demonstrations have been characterised as leaderless.

    On Friday police had appealed to members of the public to cut ties with “violent protesters” and had warned people not to take part in the banned march.

    Source: bbc.com