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Monthly Archives: November 2021
Government sticks ‘Kick Me’ sign on own back
At the behest of the authorities, a Hong Kong court issues arrest warrants for former legislator Ted Hui and former district councillor Yau Man-chun – both now overseas. Their alleged crime: calling for a boycott or the casting of invalid … Continue reading
Posted in Blog
13 Comments
HK Bird-Watching Society still free
HKFP describes the dismantlement – so far – of Hong Kong’s civil society through a list of 50 groups and NGOs that have disbanded under the NatSec regime replaced the city’s autonomy in mid-2020. They include professional organizations dating back … Continue reading
Posted in Blog
4 Comments
Some weekend reading, before loopholes are plugged
More censorship on the way. Enjoy what’s left while it lasts. More good commentary on the Peng Shuai affair, from World Politics Review. And Asia Sentinel offers a conspiracy theory – that Peng’s accusations were part of a pre-emptive Xi-ist … Continue reading
Posted in Blog
16 Comments
Shock survey result: one in three takes ‘election’ seriously
Beijing-backed Ta Kung Pao accuses opinion pollsters PORI of inciting misleading incitement or something, for reporting that only 34% of citizens definitely plan to vote at next month’s quasi-election, and 52% think they probably sort of might (as the slide … Continue reading
Posted in Blog
2 Comments
Out of the Loup
A letter in the FT several days ago, and one of the replies… On Peng Shuai: Beijing demands that foreign forces stop ‘deliberately and maliciously hyping up’ the affair. China Media Project didn’t get the memo. Nor did ‘mixes creepiness … Continue reading
Posted in Blog
22 Comments
Anti-Pedestrian Dept delivers another horror
From Transit Jam – Hong Kong’s psychopath transport planners strike again. Although only 10% of households have them, private cars account for 47% of visits to the West Kowloon Cultural Hub-Zone District, and taxis another 31%. There is no legal … Continue reading
Posted in Blog
9 Comments
Who needs the public’s trust when you can jail them?
An HKFP op-ed asks how the Hong Kong government can regain public trust if it doesn’t admit its own role in provoking and escalating the 2019 protests (let alone 20 years of incompetence beforehand). The key issue is accountability… …for … Continue reading
Posted in Blog
5 Comments
On the way to the vaccination centre
Just a few days ago, I briefly wondered for some reason how long it would be before Chickeeduck closes in Hong Kong if landlords won’t rent them space. And voila! I would like to say how prescient I am, but … Continue reading
Posted in Blog
7 Comments
Today’s non-fake news
Lee Cheuk-yan’s mitigation before sentencing for ‘incitement’ and other charges relating to last year’s Tiananmen vigil… Your Honour, the people of Hong Kong who took part needed no person or organisation to incite them. If there was a provocateur, it … Continue reading
Posted in Blog
9 Comments
Under the NatSec regime, even chambers are suspect
Not that 99.9% of Hongkongers will notice, but AmCham chair Tara Joseph decides to quit. The RTHK item says… …she is resigning as she cannot appeal to the city’s government to ease Covid-19 restrictions at the same time as having … Continue reading
Posted in Blog
3 Comments
