From HKFP, more on Security Secretary Chris Tang’s ‘soft resistance’ comments…
“Now that we have laws in place, they might be afraid of [committing] officially illegal acts,” Tang said, referring to the city’s national security legislation: both the Beijing-imposed national security law and the locally enacted Safeguarding National Security Ordinance, known colloquially as Article 23.
“So they may think that they can skirt the law, that they’ll be fine if they spread hatred. But these are still all illegal acts,” he said without elaborating. He also did not mention whether the authorities had taken action against those people.
So ‘soft resistance’ is an unofficially illegal act?
Tang also said on Friday that some Hongkongers who had joined the Ukrainian military hoped to use their training against the city’s authorities.
“Our investigations have found that part of their intention is to receive training there and, when they return to Hong Kong, continue their resistance against the local government,” Tang said, without explaining further.
Maybe he should take a vacation.
A WSJ editorial…
Dictatorships rewrite the past to control the present, and so it goes in Hong Kong as its former British legal system becomes a replica of China’s. This month three Hong Kong citizens went on trial for the alleged crime of organizing candlelit vigils to remember the 1989 Chinese massacre at Tiananmen Square in Beijing.
For three decades following that Communist slaughter of unarmed Chinese, Hong Kong was the only place on Chinese soil where that crime was publicly remembered. But starting in 2020 any public display of remembrance, however quiet and nonviolent, was banned. Chow Hang-tung, Albert Ho and Lee Cheuk-yan face up to a decade in prison for the crime of memory.
HKFP reports on the latest in the HK Alliance trial…
Two Tiananmen vigil activists facing national security charges persisted with their long-standing advocacy for democracy in China, with one doing so despite a warning from a Beijing official, a Hong Kong court has heard.
Lee Cheuk-yan and Chow Hang-tung are standing trial for “inciting subversion” under the Beijing-imposed national security law, which carries a maximum penalty of 10 years in jail.
…On Monday, prosecutors finished playing footage of speeches made by the pair at protests and in media interviews, highlighting to the court their comments relating to the Alliance’s advocacy of “ending one-party rule” in China.
Advocacy. Words. That’s it.
A comment yesterday on the short-lived bus safety law…
Just install the wretched seat belts and let people decide whether they want to use them or not (they do not).
And warn people that if they are injured in an accident while not buckled up, they will be billed for the EMS/public hospital treatment they receive. It would be an interesting experiment.












