A funny story from yesterday: A horde of police were trying to catch 2 youths they suspected of having thrown debris in the road. 1 cop dropped his baton. An old man picked it up, dropped it down a manhole cover, & sauntered away. When police came back for it, it was gone.
All of #HK's resisting tyranny, each as they can. This is an occupied city. It's not a free, or 'semi-free' city, any more than France was semi-free under Nazi occupation. #HK is occupied. Unless you apply this lens to the situation, it's hard to understand what's happening here.
Another story: Police are charging protesters on Canal Rd. Many scatter into Bowrington wet market. A protester asks a stall holder if he wants them to help move his wares indoors as police may charge through. The stall holder says, No, better to block them, may they all die.
Up to then, who knew what this wet market seller's opinion was? 'May their whole families die' is a typical slogan chanted at police (one I don't agree w, btw, but I understand the sentiment). The wet market seller's statement is by a person who knows his city is under occupation
I wonder what the police think. Is it beginning to dawn on them that they're going to be working directly under & for the Chinese security state? Last year, several police told me separately they think #HK would be better off under direct #CCP rule. Now they'll get their wish.
Other police have always believed they've simply been maintaining law&order in a difficult situation. Does the prospect of enforcing crimes like 'treason','subversion', 'separatism', 'foreign interference', 'terrorism'-all ill-defined & abusively applied in China-give them pause?
Another moment from yesterday: Black-clad raptors charge a crowd, their rifles pointed at them (a shocking image not long ago, now all too common). There's a brief stand-off. One person steps out from the crowd, & at a distance of about 10m, shouts at the raptors,"....
...'Kill us all, why don't you just shoot us all? You're #HK people, we're HK people-why are you doing this? Don't you realize you're going to be working for the #CCP when this law goes through?' There was a weird frozen moment when everything was silent...
...as if everyone, police & citizens, was briefly reflecting. Then back to usual, cops playing cops, protesters playing protesters, everyone acting out their roles as the #HK reality around them changes. The psychological adaptations (or lack thereof) will be interesting to watch
One group where the lobotomy is complete: the #HK govt & top police officials: their statements on 'pro-independence rioters' & how yesterday showed the need for 'national security' laws shows how entirely they've lost the plot & are simply dictated to from Beijing...
Of all the #HK freedom struggle's accomplishments, 1 thing we've never managed is to get #CCP allies in #HK to defect/withdraw support. Scholars of freedom struggles always identify this phenomenon as a crucial turning point. W/out it, it's hard to win.
Will the 'national security' laws change the calculations of regime supporters, #HK police, govt officials, tycoons? Or will they all just keep following the Party line? Tycoons 'vote' by moving their assets elsewhere & they're just replaced by Chinese companies. The others?
Some say this is the 'end of #HK'. I understand the need to sound the alarm (& it is indeed alarming!) but it's worth considering this is also possibly #CCP overreach, of which there's been many recent examples-Belt&Road, Xinjiang crackdown; aggressive, alienating 'diplomacy' etc
In other words, what are the limits of the Party's power? It often can appear omnipotent, but even for a such a powerful regime, there's a point at which something's gotta give. What is that point? It was easy to swallow Macau. #HK? We'll see....
The thing to keep in mind is that in brazenly breaking its '1c2s' obligations on #HK, #CCP isn't just swallowing up a colony; this is international aggression, like Putin annexing Crimea. #CCP is thumbing its nose at the international community. Which step is one step too far?
In this piece @stevenleemyers situates what #CCP's doing in #HK in context of its increasingly aggressive global actions. There's a reason why #HK protesters coined the hashtag #ChiNazi. The rest of the world didn't get it/felt offended. Do you get it now? nytimes.com/2020/05/24/wor…
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I am beginning to think the #HK freedom struggle should take the 'opportunity' of the cancellation of Legco elections & the multi-front crackdown to develop our democratic capabilities. This can take many forms but I particularly have in mind the setting up of a shadow parliament
The shadow parliament, unlike the #HK govt or Legco, would be fully democratically elected. Its basis could be the recent pro-democracy primary + perhaps District Councils. It would be elected by people in the HK freedom struggle & represent them.
It would debate and vote on policies, including how to proceed w the freedom struggle in the face of increasingly authoritarian rule. It would be a model of democracy in #HK, something that has never existed here in any form, neither under UK or Chinese colonialism.
Have just swiftly read the 'national security law' which came into effect at 11pm on June 30 at the moment it was published. As of yet, there's no English translation. My 1st observation is, no big surprises: most of the contents were previously divulged. gld.gov.hk/egazette/pdf/2…
There's nothing in the law that provides for its retroactive application or for transport of suspects/defendants from #HK to China. Nor is there anything in it about the Chief Executive choosing judges for natsec trials or the setting up of separate natsec courts.
But much of the law is vaguely worded & open to interpretation, & the law clearly states only the NPCSC has the power of 'interpretation', which means in effect that to a large extent, the law means whatever the #CCP, a clearly interested party in the matter, says what it means.
Lots of people gathering now around Sogo in Causeway Bay for #June12 anniversary. Poster of that day’s events are displayed. Lots of police too, both riot & undercover. Remember:all protests are still banned &police have announced thousands of cops are out tonight to prevent them
20.08 In Mong Kok, a large number of citizens have been indiscriminately kettled, presumably for stop&search. This is a frequently employed rights-abusing technique of the police. Very large police presence near Langham Place.
People also gathering in New Town Plaza mall in Sha Tin.
The media's been full of images of police brutality in the US- George Floyd's murder & the treatment meted out to protesters. Some observers have been struck by their similarity to images from #HK over the past year, but the similarity's superficial... nytimes.com/2020/06/05/us/…
Compare the responses of US & #HK authorities & businesses: In Minnesota, where George Floyd was murdered by the police, the officers have been arrested, the governor & Dept of Human Rights have undertaken a civil rights investigation of Minneapolis police going back 10yrs....
& yesterday the Minneapolis City Council passed initial police reforms. Authorities in other states & cities are also enacting police reforms, & ideas of actually abolishing police forces as they now exist & repurposing policing have entered the mainstream nytimes.com/reuters/2020/0…
The queue’s 200 hundred meters long to get into the #LadyLiberty exhibit at openground in Sham Shui Po. Lady Liberty was destroyed by pro-CCPers on Lion Rock in Oct. A new Lady Liberty’s been made & the broken pieces of the old one, splattered in red paint, are also on display
In fact, the new #LadyLiberty is too big to fit in the 1st-floor exhibition space. She’s here only from the waist up. The artists wanted to display her on ground floor but ‘suddenly’ govt officials showed up, w police across the street, & said it was against some obscure code.
Many sculptures by #HK artists inspired by #LadyLiberty are being auctioned to raise funds for 612 Humanitarian Relief Fund, which helps protesters in need.
In response to impending ‘national security’ legislation foisted upon #HK by #CCP, @chrf_hk says it can’t announce its plans for action yet (the circumstances are difficult with all protests banned) but calls on all HK people to stand up. m.facebook.com/CivilHumanRigh…
Surely 1 reason for #CCP’s timing is to avail itself of #HK police ban on all protests on spurious public health grounds. Police have been perfecting their techniques of repression for months. CCP had to have full confidence in police to carry out its will before proceeding.
There’s a march on Sunday against another impending law inserted into Basic Law by #CCP, the PRC anthem law. It was planned before CCP announced the ‘national security’ law. But this is last weekend to protest before NPC passes the latter.