Latest for @dw_chinese (Eng version): Former #HongKong district councilor @TimothyLee_HK became the latest political figure to go into exile. In this interview, he told me what prompted him to leave and how he views the current situation in the city. williamyang-35700.medium.com/former-hong-ko…
“In 2019, I participated in the protest through a different role and in November 2019, I became one of the last batch of district councilors elected by Hong Kong people,” he wrote in his Facebook statement.
Lee said the reason that prompted him to leave Hong Kong was the mass-arrest of the 47 pro-democracy figures at the end of February for participating in the legislative council’s primary held by the pro-democracy camp in Hong Kong.
As one of the candidates in the primary, Lee thought he also faced the risk of being arrested by the Hong Kong government under the national security law.
“At the time, I saw the need to leave Hong Kong so I decided to leave,” he said. “After the Hong Kong government enforced the national security law, the freedom we enjoy in Hong Kong has already been shrinking.”
In his Facebook statement, Lee talked about how he worked as an elected representative in the district council and participated in the pro-democracy camp’s legislative council primary as a localist candidate.
Additionally, he joined the committee for establishing the “Hong Kong Citizen’s Political Platform,” hoping to build a cross-district platform focusing on issues about Hong Kong citizens’ livelihood.
However, that person was forced to dissolve after the government labeled it as “an illegal platform.”
Lee said under an ideal system, it shouldn’t be a crime for Hong Kong’s elected representatives to carry out their duties, but he believes Beijing is hoping to eliminate the space for pro-democracy politicians entirely.
“There will no longer be politicians who are pro-democracy and we are now all activists. We can’t hold office anymore in Hong Kong and we can’t meaningfully run for office.
I think after the current term of district council expires, there will be no pro-democracy politicians left. There is no longer space for pro-democracy activists to run in the system. I think it’s quite saddening and I feel frustrated.”
During the anti-extradition bill protest in 2019, Lee held a march that was protesting against the excessive amount of tourists to the area around Hung Hom, and in November that year, he was elected as one of the district councilors.
In March 2021, Lee was unseated from the Kowloon City district council after the High Court ruled that he was unduly elected as he didn’t have proof that he was supported by certain pro-democracy figures.
This made him the first pro-democracy district councilor to be disqualified. Lee said he feels like he has abandoned his friends and allies for leaving Hong Kong, but he hopes to carry the complicated feeling with him as he begins his new life abroad.
As for how he plans to contribute to the growing international campaign for Hong Kong, Lee thinks that he doesn’t carry enough political mandate in Hong Kong to carry out advocacy works overseas, ...
... but he plans to do things that are good for Hong Kong’s democracy movement from behind the scenes. “I will continue to write about Hong Kong culture and Hong Kong politics and I will continue to do some behind-the-scenes work,” he said.
“There will be Hong Kong people in every part of the world and there will be a need for a Hong Kong guy like me to help each other. I will just do whatever I can help the democratic cause in Hong Kong and help the Hong Kong people.”
As Hong Kong prepares to hold the postponed legislative council election in December, Lee describes it as “a completely undemocratic election.”
“It’s just an NPC-style election in Hong Kong and it’s a clear violation of the joint declaration as the British Foreign Secretary has already said,” he said.
Last month, the Hong Kong government announced that the legislative council election will be held on December 19, and before that, Beijing’s National People’s Congress passed a series of amendments to reform Hong Kong’s electoral system.
The Chinese government described the series of electoral reform as letting patriots rule Hong Kong and claimed that these mechanisms can prevent “anti-China” individuals from entering the power structure in Hong Kong through elections.
However, some experts criticized China’s move as “a second handover” for Hong Kong and they viewed it as the latest way for Beijing to limit Hong Kong’s political freedom.
As one of the last batch of democratically elected representatives in Hong Kong, Lee thinks the Hong Kong government is going to exclude district councilors from the formulation process of policies in Hong Kong.
He also worries that once the government begins to implement the oath-taking law for district councilors, more pro-democracy politicians could be disqualified.
Despite the challenges ahead, Lee emphasizes that Hong Kong will always be his only home no matter where he is. “I won’t just emigrate to another country and call it home,” he said. “Hong Kong is my only home.”
Mandarin version of the piece for @dw_chinese: dw.com/zh/%E5%8F%88%E…

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More from @WilliamYang120

7 May
Latest for @dwnews: On Thursday's "Arts and Culture" program, I talked about #China's recent attempt to extend its #Xinjiang propaganda effort to the realm of cinema, with the release of a musical and several documentaries by @CGTNOfficiale. dw.com/en/arts-and-cu…
The musical, called the Wings of Songs, featured three main characters from three different ethnic community, is a clear attempt by #Beijing to present its version of "ethnic unity" in a very forceful way.
I cited the prominent phrase used in Chinese official documents and state media, describing the ethnic unity as "the seeds of a pomegranate," to highlight #Beijing's insistence to claim that all ethnic groups in #China live harmoniously together.
Read 10 tweets
7 May
On the same day when @joshuawongcf and three other pro-democracy activists received more prison sentences, five #HongKong people, including a 15-year-old, were arrested by police under the #NSL. straitstimes.com/asia/east-asia….
Local reports said three of those detained were scooped up on Thursday morning during raids looking for members of a group called "Returning Valiant".
"Their comments left on social media could constitute the offences of secession and subversion under the national security law," a police source told the South China Morning Post daily.
Read 6 tweets
6 May
Latest: Following the further sentencing of @joshuawongcf and three other activists and the postponement of Jimmy Lai's case, I talked to @ayhcheung, Emily Lau and Kenneth Chan about what the recent wave of sentencing mean for #HongKong: dw.com/en/hong-kong-c…
If convicted, Lai could be sentenced to up to seven years in jail. However, it won't be the first jail term that Lai will have received. Last month, he was handed 14 months in prison for participating in an unauthorized assembly in August 2019.
Wong, who is already imprisoned, was handed an additional 10 months for unauthorized assembly and participating in the Tiananmen Square vigil, held on June 4, 2020. Three others were sentenced to four to six months in the same case.
Read 21 tweets
6 May
Latest on @radionz: In my latest appearance on the Overseas Correspondent's segment, I talked to the host about #Taiwan's recent wave of local #COVID19 cases extended from a suspected quarantine hotel mismanagement, #Taiwan's challenge to ... rnz.co.nz/national/progr…
... increase vaccination rates with the lack of #COVID19 vaccine options. The new #COVID19 case and the low vaccination rate have increased the anxiety here in #Taiwan, as both the government and the public becoming more vigilant about pandemic prevention.
Then I touched on the motion that the NZ parliament passed yesterday, which they unanimously declared #China's persecution of #Uyghurs in #Xinjiang as a serious human rights violation and concern.
Read 6 tweets
6 May
As Muslims around the world celebrate Ramadan, those in #China are forced to follow strict government guidelines as they try to maintain their religious tradition. That's especially true for #Uyghurs in #Xinjiang. By @dakekang and @kmorit: apnews.com/article/china-…
" Tursunjan Mamat, a practicing Muslim in western China’s Xinjiang region, said he’s fasting for Ramadan but his daughters, ages 8 and 10, are not. Religious activity including fasting is not permitted for minors, he explained."
“My children know who our holy creator is, but I don’t give them detailed religious knowledge,” he said, speaking through a translator. “After they reach 18, they can receive religious education according to their own will.”
Read 10 tweets
6 May
Just in: #China's Xinhua News agency reported that #Beijing announced that it will indefinitely suspend all activities under the #China - Australia strategic and economic dialogue.
More from @XinhuaBrisMUN: "Recently, some Australian Commonwealth Government officials launched a series of measures to disrupt the normal exchanges and coopertaion between China and Australia out of Cold War mindset and ideological discrimiation."

xinhuanet.com/fortune/2021-0…
"Based on the current attitude of the Australian Commonwealth Government toward China-Australia cooperation, the National Development and Reform Commission of the People’s Republic of China decides to indefinitely suspend ...
Read 4 tweets

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