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Dark Days in Hong Kong
Gatestone Institute ^ | May 1, 2019 at 5:00 am | Gordon G. Chang

Posted on 05/01/2019 3:30:53 AM PDT by robowombat

Dark Days in Hong Kong by Gordon G. Chang May 1, 2019 at 5:00 am

The continued defiance of Hong Kong's people in the face of Chinese repression is inspiring resistance in Taiwan.

"In the early 1980s the 'one country, two systems' concept was created for Taiwan, not for Hong Kong," said Ma Ying-jeou to Al Jazeera when he was Taiwan's president in September 2014. "But Taiwan has sent a clear message that we do not accept the concept."

Xi Jinping, the current Chinese ruler, once held the Hong Kong portfolio in the Communist Party's Politburo Standing Committee. He certainly knows that one of the signs of Chinese regime failure is trouble on the periphery, and he is determined that the open defiance in Hong Kong does not spread to other areas far from the center of Chinese power. Xi has no effective response to Hong Kong, however.

A court in Hong Kong on Sunday sentenced eight of nine democracy activists for their role in the massive "Occupy Central" protests in 2014. The prosecution was seen, both in Hong Kong and elsewhere, as a sign of Beijing tightening its control over the city. Pictured: Democracy protesters hold umbrellas to support the arrested activists of the "Occupy Central" movement, on December 3, 2014 in Hong Kong. (Photo by Lam Yik Fei/Getty Images) Tens of thousands of people took to the streets in Hong Kong on Sunday to protest planned changes to the city's extradition law. Many believe new rules facilitating the sending of suspects to China would effectively allow Beijing to grab people at will and thereby completely control the city. "You will be screwed," said a marcher, a law clerk, to Reuters.

The turnout was high — organizers said 130,000 people took part — in part because the demonstration followed the sentencing of democracy activists for their role in the massive "Occupy Central" protests in 2014. On Wednesday, a lower court handed out prison terms of between eight to 16 months to four of the "Umbrella Nine." Three others received suspended sentences. One person was given 200 hours of community service.

The eight individuals — the sentencing of a ninth person was postponed for medical reasons — were convicted of public nuisance offenses in a closely watched proceeding on April 9. The prosecution of the 9 figures was seen, both in Hong Kong and elsewhere, as a sign of Beijing tightening its control over the city.

"It's indeed one of the darkest days in Hong Kong history," Tak Ho Fong, host of "Peking Hotel" on Hong Kong-based digital radio station D100, told the Gatestone Institute in e-mail comments.

Dark indeed. Nobody strangles democracies like communists, and no communists are more relentless in this regard than Chinese ones. Beijing, with methodical ruthlessness, is trying to bring Hong Kong to heel, and this is a hint of weakness at the center of Chinese politics and governance. China's communists, whether or not they succeed in Hong Kong, will undermine their efforts to win over Taiwan.

Hong Kong, once a British colony, was "handed back" to China on July 1, 1997 pursuant to the Sino-British Joint Declaration of 1984. In the Joint Declaration, a treaty with Britain, Beijing promised to afford Hong Kong a "high degree of autonomy" for 50 years. Hong Kong since July 1997 has been designated a Special Administrative Region of the People's Republic of China and governed under the "one country, two systems" formula. Pursuant to this formula, Hong Kong governs itself, except it does not maintain diplomatic relations and does not provide for external defense.

Beijing this month proved it could put activists in jail — prison sentences of other Occupy Central activists were earlier overturned — and in response to the Wednesday sentences human rights organizations issued warnings. "The long sentences send a chilling warning to all that there will be serious consequences for advocating for democracy," noted Maya Wang of Human Rights Watch.

Relief was nonetheless evident when Judge Johnny Chan Jong-herng of the West Kowloon Court handed down his decision. The activists could have received seven-year prison terms stemming from the 79-day "Umbrella" demonstration, so named because protestors used umbrellas to shield themselves from tear gas. Many of the extradition marchers on Sunday carried umbrellas, not only to block out the sun.

A total of 1.2 million people participated in the 2014 demonstration — peak numbers exceeded 100,000 at times — to stand against Beijing severely restricting the field of candidates for the office of chief executive, the successor post for the colonial governor. As a result of Beijing effectively dishonoring promises of universal suffrage, none of the chief executives — Carrie Lam, the current one, is the fourth since the handover — has been considered legitimate except by supporters of Beijing.

The perceived lack of legitimacy has made the chief executives ineffective. Beijing has responded by infringing on the self-rule it had promised. For one thing, it has rejected, despite the clear wording of the agreement with Britain, the notion that there are any restrictions on its power over Hong Kong like its promise of autonomy for the city. "The Sino-British Joint Declaration, as a historical document, no longer has any realistic meaning," said Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Lu Kang in June 2017. "It also does not have any binding power on how the Chinese central government administers Hong Kong."

Moreover, China, from behind the scenes, has infringed on Hong Kong's autonomy by, for instance, arranging the removal of legislators, disqualifying candidates, even outlawing a political party.

Moreover, Beijing, represented in the city by its "Liaison Office," is now pushing for a law to punish disrespecting the "March of the Volunteers," the Chinese national anthem.

Beijing's heavy-handed tactics have not been particularly effective, however. The more it has clamped down, the less popular it has become.

Polls on self-identification carry a chilling message for Beijing. Less than four percent of Hong Kong's young self-identify as "Chinese" or "broadly Chinese." That's down from around 30 percent in 1997. The widely followed Hong Kong University poll shows that fewer people in Hong Kong are proud of their new Chinese nationality than at the handover — 38 percent versus 46.4 percent — and that younger age cohorts are less proud than the population as a whole.

Senior Chinese leaders, by overreaching, have managed to create both an independence movement in Hong Kong and a campaign to return the city to British rule. For now, Hong Kong people express this latter sentiment by, among other things, carrying colonial-era flags and sporting Union Jack-adorned clothing. All this suggests increased activism in Hong Kong.

The continued defiance of Hong Kong's people in the face of Chinese repression is inspiring resistance in Taiwan. Beijing maintains that the self-governing island is part of the People's Republic and, going back to the era of Deng Xiaoping, has proposed to rule it under the same "one country, two systems" approach. Yet as Chinese leaders smother Hong Kong, 1C2S, as the plan is known, becomes even less attractive to Taiwan.

"Today's Hong Kong, tomorrow's Taiwan" has become the rallying cry of young Taiwanese. The 1C2S idea has united most of Taiwan, including the pro-China elements there, in the belief that becoming part of the People's Republic would be a nightmare. "In the early 1980s the 'one country, two systems' concept was created for Taiwan, not for Hong Kong," said Ma Ying-jeou to Al Jazeera when he was Taiwan's president in September 2014. "But Taiwan has sent a clear message that we do not accept the concept."

Xi Jinping, the current Chinese ruler, once held the Hong Kong portfolio in the Communist Party's Politburo Standing Committee. He certainly knows that one of the signs of Chinese regime failure is trouble on the periphery, and he is determined that the open defiance in Hong Kong does not spread to other areas far from the center of Chinese power.

Xi has no effective response to Hong Kong, however, and the growing rejection of China there must be of great concern, especially since harsh rule has already lost hearts and minds in China's west, in both Tibet and what the Chinese call the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region. Traditional inhabitants of Xinjiang, the Muslim Uighurs, say their land is a separate country, East Turkestan.

"We do not give up," Chu Yiu-ming, one of the Umbrella Nine, declared from the defendant's dock on April 9. Chinese dynasties unravel at the edges, and Beijing looks desperate to keep the increasingly resistant Hong Kong, at China's southern edge, from drifting too far from its control.

Gordon G. Chang is the author of The Coming Collapse of China and a Gatestone Institute Distinguished Senior Fellow. Follow him on Twitter @GordonGChang.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: china; hongkong
Hong Kong ought be an independent country such as Singapore. Returning it to the PRC was a horrible mistake. Back in the 60's I loved going to HK, its optimistic dynamism and free market ethos were a great rejuvenator after being in the US with the ever present media Viet Nam screaming, the 'counterculture' in full swing and the Dems beginning to push the grievance culture.
1 posted on 05/01/2019 3:30:53 AM PDT by robowombat
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To: robowombat

Sad to say, if you really want to see “optimistic dynamism and free market ethos” in that part of the world, not to mention huge numbers of people who have gone from being dirt-poor to the First World in a generation’s time, you need to go across the border to Shenzhen,


2 posted on 05/01/2019 3:39:52 AM PDT by untenured
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To: robowombat

“Nobody strangles democracies like communists...”

Or Democrats. But I guess that’s the same thing.


3 posted on 05/01/2019 4:06:44 AM PDT by Brilliant
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To: robowombat
This article is sarcasm, right? You want to post some anti-China propaganda on Mayday, right?

What ever you all say. Most (and I mean 99.999999%) of the people who read this rubbish has never been to HK, and wouldn't know the difference from Stanley to Mong Kok. So you play the role of CNN and broadcast some pretty extreme opinions.

I get it.

I'm called a chi-com apologist by the mentally retarded. Nope. Just a realist that says that America must plan to deal with things as they really are, and not some kind of fantasy. It is that kind of wishful thinking that has us fighting eight wars right now.

Hey! How's those hundreds of trillions of dollars dumped in Afghanistan helping your family out personally? I'd like to know. How about Yemen? Iraq? or what about Libya? You do know that all the money that could be building high-speed rail, bridges, giving people free healthcare, and all sorts of free stuff is out there fighting wars for rich Saudi Oligarchs...

But I digress.

You can do a lot with a couple of hundred trillion dollars if you don't waste it blowing sheep herders to the heavens. You can invest it in education. You can provide cheap healthcare. You can use it to retrain laid off folk, and provide funding for those that choose to live off the dole. There is so much you can do.

I am not seeing any of what is written here. And I was in Ma Liu Shui two hours ago.

So...

Just put me down as a contrary opinion to this rubbish. Maybe, all those Taiwanese are gonna rise up and move out of their houses inside mainland China and demand that China do something different... Something... don't know what... but something....

Because you know, that's where many of them live. They have family on the mainland, or don't you know anyone who does, eh?

You all need to go out, pull some friends together and have some shao kou and pi jiu. You are taking life way too seriously. And it doesn't need to be that way. Seriously, dude. Life is not that big dark place like you describe. It's actually pretty decent, and there are many pretty decent folk out about.
4 posted on 05/01/2019 4:09:22 AM PDT by vannrox (The Preamble to the Bill of Rights - without it, our Bill of Rights is meaningless!)
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To: robowombat

‘Dark indeed. Nobody strangles democracies like communists, and no communists are more relentless in this regard than Chinese ones.’

Very sad for Hong Kong, but the author here, I guess, is not aware of the Democrat Party that Trump has been fighting.

But then neither are my parents, or my immigrant wife.


5 posted on 05/01/2019 4:25:21 AM PDT by BobL (I eat at McDonald's and shop at Walmart - I just don't tell anyone.)
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To: robowombat
Returning it to the PRC was a horrible mistake.

True enough.But if Britain *hadn't* done so the Butchers of Beijing wouldn't have hesitated for a millisecond to send tanks down Nathan Road.

6 posted on 05/01/2019 4:33:08 AM PDT by Gay State Conservative (Bill Barr:The Bill Belichick of Attorneys General)
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To: vannrox

You were actually making a partially valid argument there, and then blew it up with “hundreds of trillions of dollars”.

That figure is utter nonsense.

I’d also point out that while the US does blow too much money and too many lives on ill conceived ventures (think Obama-Hillary Syria and Libya) or ill executed (think Obama’s “conclusion” (HAH! /s) in Iraq), in the end, most of our military spending goes toward economic benefit and in some cases, advantage. This might be called “optimizing the playing field”, and it comes in many forms, some obvious, but more are subtle. Unfortunately this is partially offset by too often inane domestic policies: Trump is “workin’ on it”, but is beset by 50+ years of Deep State to unravel, which of course the Deep State in its insatiable and short sighted hunger for power resists vigorously.

Fix those policies, and then with the playing field REALLY to our benefit, we’d have likely averaged GDP of 5-6% the last 50 years. Think about where THAT would have put the US....


7 posted on 05/01/2019 5:27:03 AM PDT by Paul R. (The Lib / Socialist goal: Total control of nothing left worth controlling.)
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To: robowombat

The night view from Victoria Peak:

The most amazing skyline I’ve ever seen, just dazzling.

And the food! And desserts! Hong Kong is just amazing.

The only part I don’t like is all the little SCAMS.

To survive you develop this ugly view that ANY stranger is a potential scammer, it’s really dark and exhausting.


8 posted on 05/01/2019 6:49:55 AM PDT by gaijin
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To: Paul R.; vannrox

Came here to say that. Ridiculous hyperbole has no place in a serious argument.


9 posted on 05/01/2019 8:20:11 AM PDT by sparklite2 (Don't mind me. I'm just a contrarian.)
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To: vannrox
Your argument is incoherent. Transferring any non-communist territory to a communist state is not a good idea. Your hyperbole is also pretty silly.
10 posted on 05/01/2019 12:30:39 PM PDT by robowombat (Orthodox)
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