Is Free Speech Doomed in Hong Kong?
Last week’s sedition conviction is yet another step backward for press freedom.

Chung Pui-kuen and Patrick Lam were convicted last week by Hong Kong District Court Judge Kwok Wai-Kin on charges of "conspiracy to publish and reproduce seditious publications," per NPR. The charge of sedition includes "inciting hatred or contempt against the Chinese central government [and] the Hong Kong government." Following their convictions, the two journalists each face a maximum of two years in prison and a fine of HK$5000 (or $640).
Pui-kuen and Lam, the former editors in chief of Stand News, which shut down following a 200-officer police raid in December 2021, had charges brought against them in October 2022 for 17 articles published from July 2020 to December 2021. Prosecutors alleged these articles, including "opinion pieces criticizing the national security law" and "interviews with former pro-democracy lawmakers," promoted "illegal ideologies" and smeared the 2020 National Security Law (NSL) during the 2019 protests.
Hong Kong's pro-democracy protests were prompted by the Hong Kong Security Bureau's proposed amendments to extradition laws, which would enable Chinese extradition of Hong Kongers, in February 2019. In response, thousands took to the streets in March of that year and over half a million followed suit in June. On October 23, 2019, the extradition bill was withdrawn, but this victory for Hong Kong's freedom was short-lived. In May 2020, Beijing announced it would impose the NSL on Hong Kong. The Chinese parliament approved the measure on May 28, and a month later, the law went into effect.
Jimmy Lai, the billionaire founder of clothing retailer Giordano and founder of the newspaper Apple Daily, was arrested in August 2020 under the NSL for "collusion with foreign forces," to which Lai pleaded not guilty. Lai is currently being held in solitary confinement.
Then, in June 2021, Apple Daily was raided under the NSL. Five editors were arrested for "'use of journalistic work' to incite foreign forces to impose sanctions on Hong Kong and China," according to the Associated Press, citing Hong Kong Security Secretary John Lee. Following the 500-officer raid, Apple Daily shut down for good.
Other courageous pro-democracy voices have faced even stricter punishment under Chinese jurisdiction. Yang Hengjun, a Chinese-Australian writer, academic, and former employee of China's Ministry of State Security, was convicted of espionage in a closed-door hearing in May 2021. Hengjun's death sentence was commuted to life in prison this February, following a two-year probationary period.
Francis Lee, a journalism professor at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, tells NPR that last week's ruling against Pui-kuen and Lam extends the definition of smearing to include speech critical of the government. In the wake of the ruling, Eric Chan, Hong Kong's chief secretary for administration, said there would be no restrictions on freedom of speech if "journalists conduct their reporting based on facts." Apparently these facts do not include those inconvenient to the government.
The law invoked to prosecute Pui-kuen and Lam is a holdover from Hong Kong's British colonial era that had not been invoked since the nation was brought under Chinese control in 1997. The British origin of the sedition law is bitterly ironic: Lai credited the British with giving "us the institutions of freedom….Rule of law, free speech, and the free market." Given the U.K.'s unimpressive record on free speech, the law's British provenance is not terribly surprising.
As if speech were not sufficiently curtailed in China and Hong Kong by the NSL and the British sedition law, the Article 23 law, a.k.a. Safeguarding National Security Ordinance, was signed into law unanimously in March of this year. Article 23 "expands the crime of sedition…and raises the maximum punishment from two years in prison to 10," according to NBC News.
In a letter to the court, Lam wrote that "journalists do not have to be loyal to anyone….If we have any true allegiance, it is to the public and only the public, because we believe in freedom of the press and freedom of speech." In an earlier display of courage, Lai said he was "happy" to have "[gotten] into trouble" for standing up for what's right because "if we just surrender…we will lose the rule of law. Lose the freedom." Despite the best efforts of Lai, Pui-kuen, and Lam, Hong Kong has become less free.
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Betteridge's law of headlines takes a beating...
US similarities to Communist China.
“Columbia Cuts Due Process for Student Protesters After Congress Demands Harsher Punishment“
https://qoshe.com/the-intercept/jonah-valdez/columbia-cuts-due-process-for-student-protesters-after-congress-demands-harsher-punishment/175970972
Does the word “Congress” make you feel better about this? It shouldn’t.
"Is Free Speech Doomed in Hong Kong?
My answer is that free speech in Hong Kong was doomed the day the British returned control of Hong Kong to the Chinese.
Yeah...the Brits are real supporters of free speech now, aren't they?
3,300 people jailed for seditious speech in Britain.
Stalin would be proud.
Jailed? No. Arrested/detained, yes.
https://www.thetimes.com/uk/crime/article/police-arresting-nine-people-a-day-in-fight-against-web-trolls-b8nkpgp2d
So they were detained…not in a jail?
Maybe he means they were treated to a spa weekend as part of the arrests.
can’t get back on the pitch until the ref waves them in.
Might be time for us to revisit our alliance with an increasingly fascist UK.
You are aware that the UK's "fascism" was under years of Conservative, that is to say, right-wing, government, right?
My answer is that free speech in Hong Kong was doomed the day the British returned control of Hong Kong to the Chinese.
Yup. It took them a while – initially, HK was as free as it had been, but you knew it was headed in that direction. Because people in HK were still able to make money the old-fashioned way, they overlooked the encroachment on political freedoms - admittedly of relatively recent vintage.
"...Because people in HK were still able to make money the old-fashioned way, they overlooked the encroachment on political freedoms..."
Uh, right.
FOAD, slimy pile of shit.
Hey there champ. Focus on your own country.
Because people in HK were still able to make money the old-fashioned way, they overlooked the encroachment on political freedoms – admittedly of relatively recent vintage.
More accurately imo - the billionaires (who always ran Hong Kong from the opium days) were totally ok with and even encouraged encroachment on political freedoms. Those billionaires who are real estate based (or intermediary based) will continue to be allies of ChiCom. Those who aren't will leave and won't give two shits about political freedoms for the plebes.
billionaires who are real estate based
FWIW when I lived in HK (from 2000 to 2002) I was in the penthouse apartment in a generally run-down small apartment building in Robinson Road. I was told by another expat tenant that the man who owned the building lived in one of the lower apartments, and that he owned at least a hundred properties around HK. “So why is he living in this building, not in a luxury apartment elsewhere?” was my obvious question. The answer was a classic. “Because he started his successful property business from that apartment and so to him it’s his lucky apartment and he doesn’t want to move in case of bad luck”.
This. Though to be fair, the UK has ceased to allow free speech as well, so maybe there's only a small difference in degree.
One of the reasons I generally think society will eventually evolve out of needing so much government is the lengths dictators go to to look legitimate, as in this case. The sentence was no doubt imposed from above, but they still went through all the motions. Same as Stalin's show trials, same as the wild west posses, even some KKK lynchings involved quickie trials with predetermined endings.
Or Hitler's Enabling Act which declared that anything Chancellor Hitler decreed had the same validity as passed legislation, and yet the Reichstag continued in operation and I think still held at least one election before Hitler invaded Poland (calling all Misek, calling all Misek).
Kings didn't do all that. "Off with his head" wasn't dressed up in any kind of justification. Parliaments began as a way of raising taxes for wars, no for making laws look legitimate.
Obama's "phone and a pen" were a step backwards, but only in saying the quiet part out loud. In general, politicians still pretend they have to look legit.
Government ain't gonna reduce itself in my lifetime, quite the reverse, no matter whether Trump gets elected or not. But I think the dark web and digital currencies have had some small effect and will continue phasing out government, very slowly, just as the Catholic church used to be the One True Government, and now is reduced to a preachy pontiff who few people take seriously outside of religion.
You have a very sunny view of the future; seems in line with the progressive post enlightenment notion that because of our inherent goodness, given the opportunity, things just have to get better over time.
Theocracy didn't just dissolve into thin air; it was replaced with autocracy, which remains alive and well. And power still corrupts as much as it ever did, and is infectious in any society.
I have a very sunny view of 500 years from now, not the next election. I am a short term pessimist and long term optimist. The US Constitution is not going to last. It's already been twisted into junk by courts and legislators; I don't think even John Adams (of Sedition Act infamy) or Alexander Hamilton (the power-mad central planner) would approve of how powerful the federal government has become, and there is no way to put the genie back in the bottle.
What I believe is that as technology continues improving, more and more of society's functions will be handled outside government's purview. Right now, I'd say that's mesh networking, the dark web, and Bitcoin, but I have faith that they are not the ultimate. Manufacturing continues to increase productivity while society increasingly shifts to software, music, movies, and other non-physical goods.
Suppose society gets to the point that half the working population lives a 90% digital life. They can live and work anywhere with a digital connection, get paid 90% digital, and live with a cheap enough physical life (shelter, food, clothes) that government won't even know they earn and spend digital money on digital work and products. Even travel, for instance; I sure like physical travel, but drones and big ass monitors can show you places physical travel is incapable of.
I believe that in 100 or 500 years, physical government will be reduced to the same shadow of its current self as the Catholic church is now. Just as those autocratic church replacements do have more competition with each other and do have to pretend harder to look legitimate, so will the digital future have more competition and have to hew more to looking legitimate.
Ok, and appreciate the civil dialogue. I will endeavor to do the same.
As for technology, as with everything, it is a double edged sword. Consider what the Chinese are doing with facial recognition software, for example. It enables a central power to track you everywhere. Add AI to that and we get super surveillance. Just what the British did with drones during the pandemic repression is bad enough; this will be nothing compared to the near future. As for X years from now, I think for all we know a giant meteor will have a vote in that [I prefer not to project too far into the future because honestly we aren't going to be around forever].
I suppose we all need to have faith in something better, and I certainly understand that. I choose to not put mine in the hands of humanity because, in spite of their/ our good intentions, I believe those roads are paved to hell. People are inherently the same, given their essential natures; technology just makes them more effective and efficient at it. If we cannot design and maintain a system [such as a constitutional republic] to limit that, I don't trust that it will get any better left to chance.
A different perspective.
Also - it is too easy [tech makes things easy] for things to get so bad as to destroy civilization before 'tech lifts us out of the danger zone'.
You have a very sunny view of the future;
And a *very* thin, if not exceptionally* modern and self-centered, view of history. Setting aside the other Abrahamic religions and the more than half the world that didn't generally recognize them (and his misconception about the Reichtag), The Catholic Church was never the One True Government any more than the US government has been the one, true Government. There is half or more of Eurasia, living under Eastern Orthodoxy for over a thousand years, that would be surprised to learn that the Catholic Church is even the one, true Christian faith, let alone the one, true Government.
*Exceptional in the global, historical sense. In the 'modern audience' worldview it's utterly predictable and banal.
Really, Europe is not the center of the universe?
Gosh, thanks for the enlightenment, Europe, but you don't count for squat, says mad.casual.
The issue with a digital economy is that is far easier for a government to control it.
Dude, we still live in a feudal society. Only thing that’s changed is the costumes. Knights wear vests instead of shiny armor while they push people around and collect money for the crown.
It's been doomed since 1997. Even slightly before that, when the UK started conceding to China's demands before the handover.
During the handover ceremonies, I do remember watching the cheering crowds in 1997, thinking "what exactly are these idiots cheering for??"
Indeed. Britain lost its main opium customers.
If "Great" Britain were still great, it would have already taken back HK.
Hong Kong is now under the sovereignty of the state ruled by the CCP. It is a wonder any vestige of free speech has lasted this long.
Hong Kong being under the CCP, doesn't surprise me however when the west declares war on free speech then everyone should be alarmed. Macron just had the owner of Telegram arrested, for guess what? The crime of Bad Speak, Britain has jailed over 3,300 for bad speak and threatens people the world over with arrest for such a heinous crime. Germany threatens to do whatever it takes to bring down the opposition AFD, I guess that includes military style assaults. In the people's Republic of Canada, protestors lose their bank accounts, are punished for bad speak.
And in the states, communist Marxist college professors scream for the destruction of the Constitution.
The problem isn't with China, it's with the west. What we are witnessing is the slow collapse of the west as it grinds itself into the dustbin of history. Freedom of speech is often the first to be removed as those in power fear the populace might find out who and why this is happening.
Hell, Kamala --- whose "values have not changed" --- in 2019 wanted the government to control what could be said online due to "misinformation".
And she could win the White House.
On a platter: "We do not have to invade the United States, we will destroy you from within." Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev.
Putin is now echoing the same sentiment, only attributing our downfall to "woke politics"
Imbeciles will vote it in democratically, relying on the promise that they will be kept "safe" and cared for.
Is free speech doomed in the former ruling power Great Britain? Define speech.
bro, free speech is five toes up here.
Five only? So it is half dead.
always appreciate when someone gets me lol
Is the title of this piece serious? It was doomed years ago.
The democrats are taking notes.
Free speech was doomed in Hong Kong as soon as it became a part of the PRC.
"Jimmy Lai, the billionaire founder of clothing retailer Giordano and founder of the newspaper Apple Daily, was arrested"...
Should be arrested for impersonating an italian to trick people into buying his 3rd rate made in china clothes.