- The police have dropped the fine issued to a 12-year-old girl who had been out shopping for crayons with her brother when she was tackled by a riot police officer in September amid protests against the postponement of the Legco elections. But as the blogger behind The Fragrant Harbour wrote, "Good luck getting an apology from [Police Commissioner Chris] Tang" for what the police put the girl and her family through!
For more than two decades, Hong Kong’s pro-democracy lawmakers played a game rigged against them. On 11 November, they had finally had enough.
“We are facing a totally new paradigm,” said Wu Chi-wai, head of the Democratic Party and convenor of the opposition camp. “We choose to stand with our colleagues who were disqualified. We will collectively resign.”...
Wu paints the mass resignation by 15 democrats as a gesture of solidarity and protest. But it was also, undeniably, an admission of defeat. Hong Kong’s old-school opposition (known as the pan-democrats) has conceded that changing the system from within – a mindset ingrained since the city’s return to Chinese rule in 1997 – was no longer possible.
Finally, here's Michael Chugani with the last say in this post. In the article I referenced at the beginning of it, he noted the following:-
Now that all opposition members have resigned, we have a [Legislative Council] with only pro-Beijing members who received far less votes than the opposition in 2016. This, in essence, means the legislature does not have a mandate from the people.
Yet they will rubber-stamp laws such as allowing loyalist Hongkongers in the Greater Bay Area to vote even though our election laws state only those ordinarily resident in Hong Kong can vote. Their aim is to create a new voter base which supports them.
It is heartbreaking to watch these supine surrogates obediently knife Hong Kong’s soul. They are Hongkongers too. Why are they so willing to change the DNA of their own home? Do they really believe in their hearts that killing off the opposition, dismantling the city’s core values, and making the judicial system more compliant is good for Hong Kong?
As I have said before, Hong Kong will not die in the way Fortune Magazine predicted. It will remain a thriving city. What will die is the Hong Kong we know.
4 comments:
It sound very eventful.
Stay Safe and Coffee is on
Hi peppylady --
Indeed, and will do!
I sincerely disagree, Hong Kong over time WILL NOT be THRIVING.
Because there will be a brain drain from the city emigrating elsewhere and ex-pats starting to leave HK for elsewhere. Not to mention foreign direct investment in Hong Kong, Hong Kong's share will remain static while elsewhere (non-China) grows.
This will happen over time, over the course of months and years.
Hi nulle --
It remains to be seen whether you or Michael Chugani are right. In any case, neither of you are predicting a sunny future for Hong Kong.
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