‘Night fell’: Hong Kong’s first month under China security law | Malay Mail

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HONG KONG, Aug 10 — Teenager Tony Chung said he was walking outside a shopping mall when police officers from Hong Kong’s new national security unit swooped, bundled him into a nearby stairwell and tried to scan his face to unlock his phone. Chung’s alleged crime was to write comments on...

This picture taken on August 8, 2020 shows teenager Tony Chung sitting in a bookstore that is known for stocking books with sensitive political titles in Hong Kong. — AFP pic

The arrests were made under a sweeping new law Beijing imposed on Hong Kong in late June, radically changing the once-freewheeling business hub.“I think night just fell on Hong Kong,” the 19-year-old told AFP after his release on bail, the investigation ongoing. The security law — a response to last year’s huge and often-violent pro-democracy protests — upended that promise.

“I don’t think anyone expected it would be as broad-reaching as it proved to be, nor that it would be immediately wielded in such a draconian way as to render a whole range of previously acceptable behaviour suddenly illegal.”It bypassed Hong Kong’s legislature — its contents kept secret until the moment it was enacted — and toppled the firewall between the mainland and Hong Kong’s vaunted independent judiciary.

One man who allegedly drove a motorbike into police while flying an independence flag was the first to be charged — with terrorism and secession.Schools and libraries pulled books deemed to breach the new law. Protest murals disappeared from streets and restaurants. Teachers were ordered to keep politics out of classrooms.

Source: Law Daily Report (lawdailyreport.net)

 

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