
Joshua Wong said it was hard to plan for the future under the threat of the national security law imposed in Hong Kong in June. AFP
By Anthony Wallace | AFP
ON THE WEB, 23 August 2020
Pro-democracy activist Joshua Wong told Sunday how he constantly feared arrest following the imposition of a new security law in Hong Kong, in a virtual appearance at British book festival.
The 23-year-old said his very participation in the event might put him at risk, but that it was his duty to keep speaking out about China’s tightening grip on the semi-autonomous city.
Wong said that two hours before he appeared at the Edinburgh International Book Festival, he was tailed by an unknown car with a China-Hong Kong licence.
While visiting Victoria Peak in Hong Kong with friends, he said he was photographed and verbally abused by a “pro-Beijing gang”.
“Those are the common tactics that they use to target pro-democracy activists,” he said.
Wong said the price he paid in being under surveillance was “comparatively small” compared to protesters shot with live rounds during demonstrations last year.
But he said it was hard to plan for the future under the threat of the national security law China imposed on Hong Kong in June in response to last year’s huge and often violent pro-democracy protests.
He said it was “already a kind of miracle” that he was still at liberty to speak at such an international event.
“Every day I sleep, I also worry will the government come to arrest me immediately, or the day after, storm into my house at 5:00 am just like experienced by Jimmy Lai,” he said.
Media mogul Lai was among 10 people detained under the law earlier this month, and the newsroom of his Apple Daily was searched.
Uphill battle
Prominent activist Agnes Chow, who like Wong was a key figure in the “Umbrella Movement”, was also arrested. Both were released on bail.
Wong said the pro-democracy movement was only asking for the autonomy that Beijing promised Hong Kong when it was handed back from Britain in 1997.
“We are not asking something that goes too far,” he said in the interview conducted by Sophie Richardson, China director of Human Rights Watch.
Wong said he saw “no chance” for Hong Kong to have free elections under Chinese President Xi Jinping, but said activists should press on, adding that he still had hope in the people of Hong Kong.
“Hong Kong is not Hong Kong any more, but with the spirit of Hong Kongers we still go forward in this uphill battle,” he said.
Hong Kong has been destroyed by the CCP. The so-called National security law was universally detested by the Hong Kongers. Knowing, that the HK legislative assembly would never bring it into law as was required in the Sino-British Accord, the CCP parachuted it from China’s National People’s Congress, an unelected rubber stamp who themselves have no say in what they are purported to do.
It was totally against the Hong Kong Mini-constitution and the Sino-British Joint Declaration and above all against the WILL OF THE PEOPLE of Hong Kong. This is how the CCP treats people under its occupation. The people and their hopes and aspirations don’t count under this evil regime. No wonder, it’s universally hated.
Now, that the NSL has been imposed by force on Hong Kong to allay the fears of the CCP, it must live up to its promise of granting universal sufferage that was promised in the Joint Declaration.There is no reason why the HK people are denied the right to choose their own leader. What’s ailing the CCP now?
Joshua Wong has been a star performer during the Umbrella Movement and all the protests that have rocked Hong Kong. However, he must know that he is a thorn in the CCP flesh. They will find an excuse to snuff him out sooner than later. They can concoct any excuse to get him and incarcerate him for the rest of his life like so many Tibetan prisoners like Geshe Lobsang Wangchuk, Yulo Dawa Tsering, Palden Gyatso and Takna Jigme Sangpo.
He must be also aware that the CCP can eliminate him like they did the Panchen Lama and Tulku Tenzin Delek by poisoning and then tell the world, they committed suicide. This regime showed the capacity for its cruelty by not allowing a cancer stricken Liu Xiabo to receive medical treatment and made him die in prison.