1/ Hong Kong govt has just introduced its repressive and vast Article 23 legislation proposal after a very short, largely performative "consultation period." I'm out of the office this week, but wanted to provide an initial assessment of what stood out to me in my initial read.
2/ Let's start with how this law is going to be interpreted by the courts. Hong Kong law does after all still include many protections for internally-recognized human rights.
Like the NSL, the Article 23 legislation claims at the beginning that “human rights are to be respected” including the Basic Law, the ICCPR, and the ICESCR. This didn’t make any sense in the NSL, which blatantly violated these international human rights conventions, and it doesn’t make sense here.
But a bit further down, they slipped in a pretty big qualification…if any other laws conflict with the Article 23 legislation, they should be interpreted so as to favor A23’s “object and purposes.”
Since these other human rights protections all appear in other laws, this provision renders them largely meaningless. National Security trumps all.
3/ Every person with a “function” conferred by the HKSAR, from the Chief Executive to a doctor at a public hospital to the janitor at the Immigration Tower “must regard national security as the MOST important factor” in performing their job. What?
4/ Others have already noted the horrific increase in sedition penalties to 7-10 years from 2 years, for “inciting disaffection against”—i.e., criticizing—the government. But they’ve also added in this bit as constituting sedition. Under this, encouraging someone to, say, jaywalk, will now technically be punishable by 7-10 years in prison. I would imagine this is less an intentional addition than just poor drafting, but it’s unclear how encouraging others to break any non-national security law could possibly constitute sedition.
5/ In response to the calls from respected authorities across the world for Hong Kong to amend their sedition law to require an element of violent intent, which is the internationally-accepted standard for sedition, Hong Kong instead specifically added provisions to state that neither intent to incite violence nor intent to incite public disorder are required. This is a big "F you" to the concept of international rights and norms.
6/ As for state secrets, the draft (as expected) largely adopted the proposal put forth last month in the public consultation document. It includes an exceedingly broad definition of state secrets that bars revealing a wide range of both public and private information and data, similar to the secretive approach of Mainland China.
With that said, there is now a provision that permits revealing secrets that indicate government corruption/misconduct/shortcomings, and secrets that reveal a serious threat to public order, public safety, or public health. This is likely a nod to the significant concerns raised by even pro-Beijing legislators and members of the media that the law would criminalize reporting misconduct or public dangers. Whether this will actually allow space for this sort of reporting in practice remains to be seen.
7/ Now for the procedural changes.
First, the provisions allowing for extension of custody of detainees without charging them is not quite as bad as feared. The maximum period of detention without charge appears to be 14 days beyond the initial detention period (usually 2 days). That’s not great, but well below the 6 months or more that many (including me) feared.
However, these procedural provisions will effectively eliminate many of the already weak protections afforded to national security defendants.
The new law permits the police to apply for a warrant to strip defendants of their right to a lawyer during their pre-charge detention—a longstanding fundamental right in Hong Kong—and to prevent altogether defendants from consulting with particular lawyers or law firms—incentivizing criminal lawyers who want cases to “play ball” with the government and not fight too hard for their clients.
Another provision permits the cancellation of passports of “absconders,” a disturbing provision that would leave many human rights activists, including many I work with here in the US, stateless.
This is a huge law with a lot more disturbing features. It will likely pass with few significant changes, if any. It represents a clear, unequivocal move by Beijing to ensure the slightest dissent will not go unpunished in Hong Kong.
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1/ It's late here, but I want to provide quick thoughts on the Hong Kong govt's 110 page Article 23 "national security" legislation release.
My heart sinks reading every page of this. There is no moderation--this law will crush HK's remaining freedoms. sb.gov.hk/eng/bl23/doc/C…
2/ I've long said the worst case scenario for A23 is it adopts China's "state secrets" definition, which is the foundation of China's repressive, secretive regime. Yet that's exactly what this doc proposes--syncing the definition and scope of state secrets with China's.
3/ The proposed "state secrets" definition would apply to any documents or information related to "major policy decisions," "economic and social development," "technological development or scientific technology," among others. It is explicitly designed to apply expansively.
1/Another explosive report showing how Hong Kong--with govt support--has become a key hub for importing tech from Western countries and then secretly reshipping it to Russia for military use, while Western companies like @TXInstruments look the other way. bloomberg.com/news/articles/…
2/ Investigative reporter @SheridanAsia of Bloomberg reveals research by @C4ADS showing that millions in semiconductors from @TXInstruments and @ADI_News are being shipped to Russia via third countries, and Hong Kong has become the largest broker for these transactions.
3/ When asked for comment, @TXInstruments and @ADI_News said that they don't ship the devices "directly" to Hong Kong or Russia. TI further said that it "strongly opposes our chips' use in Russian military equipment." Yet, they made no claims of actually trying to prevent it.
1/ Today marks a new phase in my Hong Kong advocacy—the launch of my Patreon page. As I continue my work to draw global attention to Hong Kong’s fight for justice and democratic rights, I’m now seeking your support. patreon.com/SamuelBickett
2/ From the U.S., I’ve been advocating full time for our cause since my deportation from Hong Kong in March 2022. Until now, I've self-funded most of this work. However, to sustain these efforts long-term, your backing will be invaluable.
3/ Testifying in Congress, speaking to journalists, exposing judicial misconduct, successfully campaigning against corporate misdeeds – we've done a lot this year. We’re making progress, but there's much more work ahead.
1/ This is Kim Chan 陳鑫. He’s the “Mr X” granted anonymity to testify for the prosecution in the Hong Kong 47 trial. He’s a former cop and pro-government propagandist who somehow fooled democrats into thinking he was a changed man. And he’s lying on the stand.
2/ Chan testified today that at a May 2020 meeting, Benny Tai proposed to “overthrow” the government. Yet, as Chan’s own secret recordings and the accounts of others present prove, Tai only proposed vetoing the budget to force an election—a guaranteed right under HK’s Basic Law.
3/ As @michaelmohk, who was at the May 2020 meeting, revealed before the anonymity order, Chan was a former pro-Beijing DAB party assistant and auxiliary police officer who somehow gained Benny Tai’s trust and was allowed to join pro-Dem strategy meetings—which he recorded.
Hong Kong courts sentenced Joshua Wong to prison again, this time for doxxing a cop who wrongfully shot a protester. In honor of this ruling, following is a thread in which I also doxx the cop. apnews.com/article/joshua…
This is Officer Kwan Kar Wing 關家榮. He’s a traffic cop. How did a traffic cop end up shooting a protester and why did he even have gun in the first place, you ask? Don’t question the wisdom of the Hong Kong Police, people. You’re endangering National Traffic Security.
On 11/11/19, Traffic Cop Kwan was hanging out on a street with no traffic when a protester said something mean to him. Rather than just shouting a respectable 屌你老母 and leaving, Kwan drew a gun, shoved it against the guy’s chest, and headlocked him.
1/9 The @BrownUniversity China Summit, where professional harasser of activists CY Leung is being honored with a keynote speech, lists 2 financial sponsors: the Bush China Foundation & the China Academy. Both raise serious questions as to where the funding is coming from.
2/9 The Bush China Foundation in 2021 took $5 million from the China-United States Exchange Foundation (CUSEF), a “policy group at the center of China’s U.S. influence efforts” with “close ties to Chinese government officials.” axios.com/2021/06/05/sco…
3/9 CUSEF is run by Tung Chee-Hwa, who, like CY Leung, served as a Beijing-appointed Hong Kong Chief Executive. In January, he retired from a position as a Vice Chair of the Communist Party’s puppet legislature, the CPPCC. scmp.com/news/hong-kong…