Exiled activist and ‘absconder’ Joe Tay’s cousin and her husband are brought in for questioning by NatSec police…
Tay’s other cousin and his wife were brought in by the police for questioning earlier this month.
Tay, 62, currently based in Canada, is one of six overseas activists for whom police issued arrest warrants in December. He left Hong Kong in June 2020. Each wanted person has a HK$1 million bounty on their head for alleged national security violations.
Tay is accused of incitement to secession and collusion with foreign forces.
Police wanted poster.
As with other NatSec enforcement, investigations of fugitives’ relatives tends to lead to negative news reports overseas. To counteract ‘US-backed Western media smear campaigns’, the Hong Kong government is encouraging online ‘influencers’. Hundreds of them…
…to attract global attention through “market-savvy and humorous” approaches, Chief Executive John Lee Ka-chiu said.
Speaking at a Legislative Council Q&A session, Lee revealed that authorities invited 650 influencers in the first quarter of this year, including from the UK, Australia, South Korea, Thailand, Indonesia, mainland China and Taiwan.
Among them, an Australian influencer’s content alone garnered 50 million views, he said.
Last year, 2,600 influencers promoted Hong Kong, generating 380 million views.
China condemns the US plan to refuse or revoke student visas to some or all Chinese students. As usual with Trump, details are vague and subject to caving at any time. But whatever emerges, it seems students with CCP connections are being specifically targeted. Numerous experts on China rush to remind us all that young people in China join the Party out of cynicism rather than ideology. Kevin Carrico – former front-page star of Wen Wei Po – considers the proposed measure from a different angle…
The near universal shock at the possibility that any country in the world may not be eager to roll out the welcome mat for members of the Chinese Communist Party highlights to me the stunning degree to which membership in the Party has been normalized on a global scale.
…it is well past time to also push back against what I call here CCP privilege: the assumption that one can be a member of an organization opposed to basic human dignity and engaged in genocide without any potential repercussions, even on a global scale.
One argument defending CCP privilege claims that the Chinese Communist Party today is less a Leninist authoritarian party than just a social club or honor society.
…I am thankful to say that no social club that I ever joined has engaged in genocide or other crimes against humanity. And if by chance I had ever mistakenly joined such a social club, I would personally be eager to depart such a club once I understood what was happening, as being part of such a club would be a form of complicity in these crimes.
…The day that news of the policy proposal broke, Google searches for “quitting the Party” rose dramatically.
The self-interested nature of Party membership, based in the search for privilege, has always been the Party’s greatest strength. Yet if there is ever a price to be paid for membership, it may become the Party’s greatest vulnerability.