Jumat, 12 Juni 2020

Commentary: The intractable tug of war between China and Hong Kong - CNA

SINGAPORE: Two months ago, when the most senior mainland official in Hong Kong openly urged that national security legislation be imposed “as soon as possible”, the writing was already on the wall.

On May 28, China’s highest lawmaking authority, the National People’s Congress (NPC), followed through. It voted for plans to draft legislation that would punish secession, subversion of state power, terrorism and acts that endanger “national security”.

All this was déjà vu for observers like myself. The last proposed security bill triggered unprecedented mass demonstrations in July 2003.

Hong Kong society had been deeply unhappy with the economic downturn and poor handling of the SARS epidemic earlier that year — perhaps an eerie parallel to recent events.

READ: Commentary: Hong Kong will keep its chin up this COVID-19 outbreak and enjoy the small things

READ: Commentary: Have the Hong Kong police lost control?

With about half-a-million people marching on the streets, a record-setting turnout at the time, the bill simply had to be withdrawn. It led to the exits of several top government officials, while sending then Chief Executive Tung Chee-hwa’s public standing into an irreversible decline.

The bill became so toxic, subsequent governments equivocated on the idea of pursuing it. That is until Beijing finally decided to take matters into its own hands.

The current security proposal appears to have expanded the scope set prior in the 2003 bill. Notably, it will outlaw not only “acts” but also “activities” deemed a security threat, applying to both organisations and individuals.

READ: Hong Kong's controversial security law: What is it and why does China want it?

Further, critics argue the legislation will cast aside existing restrictions over the presence of mainland security agents in Hong Kong. Chinese security agencies may set up permanent branches to operate in the name of national security.

But much will ride on the details of the legislation, and the NPC Standing Committee has been charged with formulating them.

Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam attends the opening session of NPC in Beijing
Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam wearing a face mask following the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak attends the opening session of the National People's Congress (NPC) at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China May 22, 2020. (Photo: Reuters/Carlos Garcia Rawlins)

The timing of the national security bill unfortunately coincided with an important date for Hong Kong’s civil society, rousing many sensitivities. Many had been gearing up for the annual candlelight vigil to commemorate the Jun 4, 1989 Tiananmen Square incident.

Despite police banning vigils this year out of COVID-19 fears, thousands gathered in Victoria Park to pay their respects.

In any normal year, approving such a controversial bill so close to the Tiananmen anniversary would be tempting fate. So why is Beijing pursuing this now, of all times?

READ: Commentary: Chinese legislation actually often involves public consultation

READ: Commentary: Why it’s not in Beijing’s interest to rock the Hong Kong boat

BREWING UNREST

With the virus situation slowly improving and summer holidays on the horizon in Hong Kong, protesters are bound to head back to the streets. Frustration over the extradition bill and police action to protesters in 2019 has not subsided.

In the previous Legislative Council poll in 2016, buoyed by a historic turnout, voters elected several young, radical Beijing sceptics to power. Similarly, pro-Beijing parties suffered landslide losses in last November’s district council election. There are worries of a repeat of events.

Another round of summer protests that risk stoking lasting public anger could reshape the pivotal Legislative Council election set to take place in September.

READ: Commentary: Protests in Hong Kong may soon be a thing of the past

Indeed, thousands have already turned up in the last few weeks to protest the proposed security bill, as well as another that seeks to criminalise those who insult the Chinese national anthem.

Police have responded with tear gas, pepper spray, water cannons, and arrests — a scene Hong Kongers are familiar with by now.

READ: Hong Kong: Nearly a year of unrest

BEIJING’S SIEGE MENTALITY

In Beijing’s eyes, Hong Kong has been a base for foreign subversion and subterfuge. Last year’s chaos was proof of hostile activities by foreign elements that have it out for China, or so the story goes.

Chinese state media and government spokespersons have consistently maintained that “Western ideologues” and “black hands” are seeking to engineer a “colour revolution” in the special administrative region.

READ: Commentary: Could 'black hands' be behind the Hong Kong protests?

About a million people took to the streets of Hong Kong on June 9 to protest a proposed bill that
About a million people took to the streets of Hong Kong on June 9, 2019 to protest a proposed bill that would allow extradition to mainland China AFP/Philip FONG

More importantly, the anti-extradition bill demonstrations last year have reaffirmed Beijing’s diagnosis that Hong Kong can be an easy entry point for foreign forces to hurt China’s standing by instigating unrest.

To Chinese top leaders, US responses to the protests, such as criticisms of police brutality, meetings with Hong Kong activists and the passing of the Hong Kong Human Rights and Democracy Act, as well as its recent decision to strip the city of its US economic privileges confirm that narrative.

READ: Hong Kong loses US 'special status' - what next?

Exacerbating China’s siege mentality is the worsening geopolitical outlook. US President Donald Trump has taken aim at China for the coronavirus outbreak.

The China-US trade war is increasingly bruising, while tensions are rising in the South China Sea, not to mention the Taiwan angle coming into play with strong statements made by Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen.

With the world economy failing, domestic unemployment on an uptick, and fears of a second wave of COVID-19 infections lingering, it looks likely that Beijing will be extra-vigilant about perceived sources of instability.

Hence, a quick tried-and-tested fix has been prescribed for the “Hong Kong problem,” the city that threatens “the dam of national security”.

READ: Commentary: Embattled China knows its national priority is the economy

Earlier this year, Beijing had set the stage to enhance greater controls over the city and strengthen its pulse over the situation there.

Personnel reshuffles and the reorganisation of Beijing’s liaison office to Hong Kong, including appointing an ally of President Xi Jinping as head and elevating the rank of the party group overseeing the city’s affairs, show that Beijing is paying greater attention to affairs there.

HONG KONGERS’ CONCERNS

Hong Kong’s traditional long-drawn legislative process tends to offer opportunities for public protests. Activists have often turned the legislative building and its surrounding districts into the locus of fierce protests for the reversal of controversial proposals, occasionally successfully.

This happened with the 2003 security law, the 2014 to 2015 electoral reform, and last year’s amendments to the extradition law.

Pro-democracy demonstrators march holding their phones with flashlights on during a protest to mark
Pro-democracy demonstrators march holding their phones with flashlights on during a protest to mark the first anniversary of a mass rally against the now-withdrawn extradition bill, in Hong Kong, China June 9, 2020. REUTERS/Tyrone Siu

While going through the NPC to pass such a law is within Beijing’s remit, Hong Kongers are concerned Beijing had chosen to bypass the city’s legislature, removing the possibility of sustained large-scale public opposition.

Hong Kongers are worried about what this bodes for the territory’s relationship with China looking to 2047 when it is fully returned to China.

Many have previously taken Beijing at its word that nothing changes till 2047. More are viewing recent developments as Beijing playing the long game as it prepares the political ground for a smooth and complete takeover.

Plans are also already afoot on the economic and cultural front. The recently unveiled Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macau Greater Bay Area initiative, for instance, would not only pave the way for Hong Kong’s economic and cultural integration with the mainland, it would remind Hong Kongers of their “historic responsibility” to their “motherland”.

READ: Commentary: The US dollar remains crucial to Hong Kong’s prosperity

READ: Commentary: China's tensions could boost Hong Kong's stock exchange

PROTESTERS’S GAME PLAN

To continue pressing their cause in a post-pandemic terrain, protesters are likely to hold fast to the “be water” organising philosophy.

Being diverse and tactically flexible seems to have contributed to the unexpected enduring momentum behind the anti-extradition bill movement.

It will be tremendously difficult for ongoing demonstrations to reach the heights of those in 2019. The possible spread of COVID-19 will dampen the enthusiasm of prospective demonstrators.

Social distancing measures and curbs on large-scale gatherings will remain in some form, limiting the scale of any planned assemblies.

Woman waves a black Hong Kong flag during a candlelight vigil ahead of the 31st anniversary of the
A woman waves a black Hong Kong flag during a candlelight vigil ahead of the 31st anniversary of the crackdown of pro-democracy protests at Beijing's Tiananmen Square in 1989, after police rejects a mass annual vigil on public health grounds, in Hong Kong, China June 3, 2020. REUTERS/Tyrone Siu

Moreover, many Hong Kongers have been disappointed with and demoralised by the government’s response to the protests. Some are even considering voting with their feet and migrating, as the future of Hong Kong becomes ever more uncertain.

READ:  Commentary: The UK’s citizenship offer to Hong Kongers is incredibly ironic

With stakes so high on both sides, protests and their consequences in 2020 will probably be bloodier, messier, and more violent.

Yet, there remains a sizable number of moderates committed to peaceful protest. They believe this yields favourable results, but their success remains to be seen.

It is unlikely that public opposition will fizzle out easily.

Upcoming traditional protest events, such as the Jul 1 annual rally, will provide clues on how things are shaping up. They should reveal any shifts in protesters’ persistence and the city authorities’ threshold of tolerance.

READ: Commentary: The deepening crisis over the Hong Kong protests

READ: Commentary: This may be the end of Hong Kong as we know it

But if both Beijing and Hong Kong leaders choose to close off more channels for public expression of demands, some protesters may feel more cornered and more willing to contemplate drastic action.

In that event, overt calls for Hong Kong independence, a hitherto marginal position, may appear at growing frequency and with greater appeal.

Even if claims for independence are unrealistic and lack legal basis (Article 1 of Hong Kong’s mini-constitution, the Basic Law, states clearly that the city constitutes an “inalienable part” of China), the underlying symbolic vision for a defence of status quo may well catch fire.

READ: Commentary: Hong Kong protests in 2019 resolved nothing

Looking beyond, an indirect casualty of this drama is “one country, two systems” as a model for talks of Taiwan’s reunification with mainland China. As it becomes less appealing and less viable for both sides, Beijing’s attempts at reclaiming Taiwan will likely be more forceful.

If so, threats to Chinese national sovereignty could then be a self-fulfilling prophecy.

Yew Wei Lit is a postdoctoral fellow at Yale-NUS College.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMidmh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmNoYW5uZWxuZXdzYXNpYS5jb20vbmV3cy9jb21tZW50YXJ5L2NoaW5hLWhvbmcta29uZy1uYXRpb25hbC1zZWN1cml0eS1sYXctcHJvdGVzdC12aXJ1cy11cy14aS1sYW0tMTI4Mjk4ODDSAQA?oc=5

2020-06-12 22:12:54Z
52780843927148

Chinese users saw Zoom as a window through the 'Great Firewall' - CNA

BEIJING: Zoom has gained a following in China in recent months from users ranging from underground churches to feminists who saw it as a rare way to connect with the world beyond the reach of state censors.

Some fear that window may be closing.

On Friday, Zoom said it had suspended accounts of three US and Hong Kong activists at Beijing's request after they tried to commemorate the anniversary of the Tiananmen Square crackdown, but that they had since been reactivated. The US company also said it was developing technology to enable it to remove or block participants based on geography.

The Chinese government heavily regulates the Internet, in a system widely dubbed the Great Firewall, saying this is needed to maintain social stability. All Chinese social media platforms are required to censor public posts deemed illegal.

"For us, the biggest challenge has been how to reach people within China because of the firewall, and Zoom for a while looked like a ray of hope," said US-based Humanitarian China founder Zhou Fengsuo, whose account was suspended.

Tiananmen survivor Zhou Fengsuo also found himself locked out of Zoom
Tiananmen survivor Zhou Fengsuo found himself locked out of Zoom. (Photo: AFP/Don Emmert)

The conferencing tool, originally designed for business use, saw Chinese user numbers surge in tandem with its global popularity amid the COVID-19 pandemic, a rare feat given how Western peers such as WhatsApp, Google Meet and Facebook are blocked in China's cyberspace.

Zoom's mobile app has been downloaded 5.4 million times from Apple's China store since Jan 1, 11 times the number over the same period in 2019, according to research firm SensorTower.

While most Chinese users turn to Zoom for conference calls and casual chats, some have seized the chance to discuss potentially sensitive topics, from patriotism to feminism.

Some state-approved and underground churches use Zoom to hold services.

"Zoom is not the only software, but we feel it's rather more accessible," said Xiao Meili, a feminist activist who held a Zoom talk in April on the #MeToo movement.

"Before, some friends recommended Tencent conference ... but everyone would feel like you shouldn't say anything that's slightly sensitive," she said, referring to a tool offered by the Chinese tech giant behind WeChat.

READ: Zoom says China demanded shutting activists' accounts over Tiananmen events

READ: Zoom briefly shuts account over Tiananmen commemoration, raising fears over free speech curbs

INSIDE THE FIREWALL

In March, Youth Lectures kicked off a series of Zoom talks, the first of which was led by Chinese University of Hong Kong professor Chow Po Chung, on freedom of speech in China. Chow's mainland China account on the Twitter-like platform Weibo has been deleted multiple times.

Other anonymous groups hosted lectures from a #MeToo activist and a gender-activist on their work in mid-May.

New York-based Lu Pin, whose influential Feminist Voices accounts on Weibo and WeChat were shut by authorities in 2018, said Zoom was a way to connect a Chinese audience to the outside world.

"You don't have to climb the firewall, people in China and outside of China both can connect to it," she said.

There are few alternatives, she said.

"This is not a multiple-choice question. If you're a Chinese person, if you don't use this, what will you use?"

Zoom's China users had already been subject to new constraints since last month when the company announced that free users would no longer be able host meetings, and new registrations were limited to some enterprises.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMicGh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmNoYW5uZWxuZXdzYXNpYS5jb20vbmV3cy9idXNpbmVzcy9jaGluZXNlLXVzZXJzLXNhdy16b29tLWFzLWEtd2luZG93LXRocm91Z2gtZ3JlYXQtZmlyZXdhbGwtMTI4MzA1NTDSAQA?oc=5

2020-06-12 11:56:20Z
52780844600708

North Korea denounces US two years after Singapore summit - Yahoo Singapore News

View photos
US President Donald Trump (R) meets with North Korea's leader Kim Jong Un (L) at the start of their summit in Singapore on June 12, 2018 -- two years on, Pyongyang says any hopes for better ties have turned to feelings of "despair"

North Korea criticised Donald Trump in a stinging denunciation of the United States on Friday, the second anniversary of a landmark summit in Singapore where the US president shook hands with leader Kim Jong Un.

It was the latest in a series of vitriolic statements from Pyongyang aimed at both Washington and Seoul, and came a day after the North implicitly threatened to disrupt November's election if the US did not stay out of inter-Korean affairs.

In recent days, Pyongyang has excoriated the South over defectors launching leaflets criticising Kim into the North and announced it was cutting all official communication links with Seoul.

Friday's broadside contained some of the harshest criticism Pyongyang has sent Washington's way in recent months, and casts doubt over the future of the two sides' long-stalled nuclear talks process.

In the onslaught, the North's foreign minister Ri Son Gwon accused Washington of hypocrisy and seeking regime change, saying that the hopes of 2018 had "faded away into a dark nightmare".

Trump and Kim were all smiles in front of the world's cameras in Singapore as a North Korean leader met a sitting US president for the first time, and afterwards Trump proclaimed on Twitter that "There is no longer a Nuclear Threat from North Korea."

But a second meeting in Hanoi last year to put meat on the bones of the North's vaguely worded Singapore pledge to "work toward complete denuclearisation of the Korean Peninsula" collapsed over what Pyongyang would be willing to give up in exchange for sanctions relief.

- 'Hypocritical' -

US diplomats insist that they believe Kim promised in Singapore to give up its arsenal, something Pyongyang has taken no steps to do.

The North is under multiple international sanctions over its banned weapons programmes.

It believes it deserves to be rewarded for its moratorium on nuclear and intercontinental ballistic missile tests and the disabling of its atomic test site, along with the return of jailed US citizens and remains of soldiers killed in the Korean War.

"Nothing is more hypocritical than an empty promise," Ri said in his statement, carried by the official KCNA news agency.

Trump has made much of his connection with Kim -- at one point declaring that they had fallen "in love" through their exchanges of letters.

But Ri said Pyongyang now believed there was no hope for an improvement "simply by maintaining personal relations between our Supreme Leadership and the US President".

He stopped just short of criticising Trump by name, but referred to comments that "the master of the White House" had "reeled off time and time again as a boast".

"Never again will we provide the US chief executive with another package to be used... without receiving any returns."

Pyongyang's latest comments were not an empty threat, said Rachel Minyoung Lee, a former North Korea analyst for the US government.

"North Koreans know they will not be getting what they want either from South Korea or the US," she told AFP. "Diplomacy no longer seems to be in the cards."

North Korea's chief diplomatic ally China urged Washington to acknowledge Pyongyang's "legitimate concerns", with foreign ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying insisting the North had taken denuclearisation measures that merited a commensurate US response.

- Deadline passed -

Trump and Kim met a third time in June 2019 in the Demilitarized Zone dividing the Korean peninsula, when Trump stepped onto North Korean soil -- a first for any American president.

But the meeting produced little in terms of tangible progress.

Subsequently, the North repeatedly demanded that the US offer it fresh concessions by December 31, but the deadline came and went.

Kim declared the North no longer considered itself bound by its unilateral testing moratoriums.

It has not yet carried out any such actions, but analysts believe it has continued to develop its arsenal throughout the discussions.

Ri accused Washington of seeking regime change and said the North had decided to bolster its nuclear deterrent "to cope with the US unabated threats of nuclear war".

Pyongyang has carried out a series of tests of shorter-range weapons in recent months -- often describing them as multiple launch rocket systems, although Japan and the United States have called them ballistic missiles.

The process leading to the Singapore summit was brokered by the South's President Moon Jae-in, but his office said Friday it had no comment to make on the anniversary.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMiXGh0dHBzOi8vc2cubmV3cy55YWhvby5jb20vbmtvcmVhLWZtLXZvaWNlcy1kZXNwYWlyLXRpZXMtdXMtc3VtbWl0LWFubml2ZXJzYXJ5LTIyMzQwMzAyMi5odG1s0gFkaHR0cHM6Ly9zZy5uZXdzLnlhaG9vLmNvbS9hbXBodG1sL25rb3JlYS1mbS12b2ljZXMtZGVzcGFpci10aWVzLXVzLXN1bW1pdC1hbm5pdmVyc2FyeS0yMjM0MDMwMjIuaHRtbA?oc=5

2020-06-12 09:14:00Z
52780839619403

Zoom says China demanded shutting activists' accounts over Tiananmen events - South China Morning Post

[unable to retrieve full-text content]

  1. Zoom says China demanded shutting activists' accounts over Tiananmen events  South China Morning Post
  2. Zoom says China demanded shutting activists' accounts over Tiananmen events  CNA
  3. Zoom accedes to Chinese demands to shutter online activist meetings  Yahoo Singapore News
  4. Zoom denies giving user information to Chinese government  TODAYonline
  5. US lawmakers ask Zoom to clarify China ties after it suspends accounts  CNA
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMieGh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LnNjbXAuY29tL3RlY2gvc3RhcnQtdXBzL2FydGljbGUvMzA4ODcwNS96b29tLXNodXQtZG93bi1hY3RpdmlzdHMtYWNjb3VudHMtb3Zlci10aWFuYW5tZW4tZXZlbnRzLXdhcy1kZW1hbmRlZNIBeGh0dHBzOi8vYW1wLnNjbXAuY29tL3RlY2gvc3RhcnQtdXBzL2FydGljbGUvMzA4ODcwNS96b29tLXNodXQtZG93bi1hY3RpdmlzdHMtYWNjb3VudHMtb3Zlci10aWFuYW5tZW4tZXZlbnRzLXdhcy1kZW1hbmRlZA?oc=5

2020-06-12 07:12:11Z
52780844600708

Hong Kong government rejects UK criticism of new security law as biased - CNA

HONG KONG: The Hong Kong government hit back on Friday (Jun 12) at a report by Britain criticising Beijing's move to impose national security legislation on the global financial hub, saying the report was "inaccurate and biased".

The British government said the proposed security law was a clear violation of China's international obligations and a breach of the "one country, two systems" formula that has governed the former British colony since its handover to Chinese rule in 1997.

READ: Hong Kong security law like 'anti-virus software': Beijing official

READ: Hong Kong police arrest 53 during fresh protests, more rallies planned

"There is still time for China to reconsider, to step back from the brink and respect Hong Kong’s autonomy and respect its own international obligations," British Foreign Minister Dominic Raab wrote in the foreword to his government's six-monthly report on Hong Kong.

Raab said a solution to the unrest fomented by a year of frequently violent rallies in the city "must come from Hong Kong, and cannot be imposed from mainland China".

However, the Hong Kong government said it firmly opposed the report's "inaccurate and biased remarks on the national security law and the high degree of autonomy enjoyed by (Hong Kong)".

Authorities in both Hong Kong and Beijing have insisted the security legislation will focus on small numbers of "troublemakers" who pose a threat to national security and will not curb freedoms or hurt investors.

"Any allegation that the law will undermine Hong Kong people's freedoms and 'one country, two systems' is no more than alarmist speculation and simply fallacious," the Hong Kong government said in a statement.

READ: Hong Kong protesters gather to mark 'million-people' march anniversary

READ: Hong Kong leader says city cannot tolerate any more 'chaos'

Legislating on national security was within the purview of Beijing, it added, and the law would help better protect the rights of Hong Kong people while restoring stability in the financial centre.

The exchange over the security legislation, which is expected to be implemented by September, came as Hong Kong marked the anniversary of a major demonstration that saw a turning point in the city's protest movement.

On Jun 12 last year, police fired tear gas and rubber bullets as protesters rallied in the heart of the business district against a proposed Bill that would have allowed extraditions to mainland China.

While the Bill was withdrawn in September, the protest movement evolved into broader appeals for democracy in the city amid fears Beijing was reneging on its pledge to give Hong Kongers freedoms not enjoyed in the mainland.

Protests are planned in the city on Friday night.

Britain has been joined by the United States, Australia and Canada in criticising the proposed security laws.

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo this week singled out HSBC as one of the major companies back the law, saying such "corporate kowtows" got little in return from Beijing and criticising the Chinese Communist Party's "coercive bullying tactics".

US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin went a step further on Thursday, saying he was working on various capital markets responses to the security law, including some measures that could restrict capital flows through the territory.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMibmh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmNoYW5uZWxuZXdzYXNpYS5jb20vbmV3cy9hc2lhL2hvbmcta29uZy1nb3Zlcm5tZW50LXJlamVjdC11ay1jcml0aWNpc20tc2VjdXJpdHktbGF3LWNoaW5hLTEyODI5MjEw0gEA?oc=5

2020-06-12 04:44:35Z
52780843927148

US lawmakers ask Zoom to clarify China ties after it suspends accounts - CNA

SHANGHAI: Three U.S. lawmakers asked Zoom Video Communications Inc to clarify its data-collection practices and relationship with the Chinese government after the firm said it had suspended user accounts to meet demands from Beijing.

The California-based firm has come under heavy scrutiny after three U.S. and Hong Kong-based activists said their accounts had been suspended and meetings disrupted after they tried to hold events related to the anniversary of China's Tiananmen Square crackdown.

Zoom said on Friday it was notified of the events and asked to take action by the Chinese government in May and early June. It said it has now reinstated these accounts and will not allow further requests from China to affect users outside the country.

"We did not provide any user information or meeting content to the Chinese government," Zoom said in a statement. "We do not have a backdoor that allows someone to enter a meeting without being visible."

The online meeting platform, which has surged in popularity as the COVID-19 pandemic has forced millions around the world indoors, has seen its downloads soar in China.

The service is not blocked in China, unlike many Western platforms such as Facebook and Twitter, which abandoned efforts to crack China's market years ago due to government demands to censor and monitor content. Twitter on Thursday said it had removed accounts tied to a Beijing-backed influence operation.

Representatives Greg Walden, the top Republican on the House Energy and Commerce Committee, and Cathy McMorris Rodgers, the ranking member of a consumer subcommittee, sent a letter to Zoom CEO Eric Yuan on Thursday asking him to clarify the company's data practices, whether any was shared with Beijing and whether it encrypted users' communications.

Republican Senator Josh Hawley also wrote to Yuan asking him to "pick a side" between the United States and China.

The three politicians have previously expressed concerns about TikTok's owner, Chinese firm ByteDance, which is being scrutinized by U.S. regulators over the personal data the short video app handles.

"We appreciate the outreach we have received from various elected officials and look forward to engaging with them," a Zoom spokesman said.

China's internet watchdog, the Cyberspace Administration of China, did not immediately respond to a faxed request for comment from Reuters.

SEPARATE CHINA FROM THE WORLD

Wang Dan, a U.S.-based dissident and exiled student leader of the crushed 1989 Tiananmen Square protests, had his Zoom account suspended. He said he was shocked to hear Zoom acknowledge it had interrupted meetings he was participating in. His June 3 event with about 200 participants was deactivated midstream, he said.

"Zoom compiled with China's request, preventing us from going about our lives smoothly," Wang said in an email to Reuters. "It cannot get away with just a statement. We shall continue to use legal means and public opinion to ask Zoom to take responsibility for its mistake."

The company said it is now developing technology to enable it to remove or block participants based on geography, allowing it to comply with requests from local authorities. It said it would publish an updated global policy on June 30.

U.S.-based Humanitarian China founder Zhou Fengsuo said he welcomed Zoom's acknowledgement of the suspensions but told Reuters it was unacceptable for the company "to separate China users from the rest of the world."

The company's China links have been called into question before.

Toronto-based internet watchdog Citizen Lab said in April it had found evidence some calls made in North America, as well as the encryption keys used to secure those calls, were routed through China. Zoom said it had mistakenly allowed Chinese data centres to accept calls.

Zoom says it has many research and development personnel in China. Its founder Yuan grew up and attended university in China before migrating to the United States in the mid 1990s. He is now an American citizen.

Bill Bishop, editor of the China-focused Sinocism news letter, wrote on Friday that "Zoom should no longer get the benefit of the doubt over its China-related issues and given how many people, organizations, government bodies and political campaigns now rely on its services the company must err on the side of transparency.

(Reporting by Ayanti Bera in Bengaluru and Brenda Goh in Shanghai; Additional reporting by Lun Tian Yew and Huizhong Wu in Beijing; Editing by Devika Syamnath, Lincoln Feast AND William Mallard)

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMifWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmNoYW5uZWxuZXdzYXNpYS5jb20vbmV3cy9idXNpbmVzcy91cy1sYXdtYWtlcnMtYXNrLXpvb20tdG8tY2xhcmlmeS1jaGluYS10aWVzLWFmdGVyLWl0LXN1c3BlbmRzLWFjY291bnRzLTEyODI5MjQw0gEA?oc=5

2020-06-12 04:42:13Z
52780844600708

Fearful Hong Kongers rush to secure limited British passports - Yahoo Singapore News

View photos
China's plan to impose a sweeping national security law on Hong Kong has many in the city considering whether to use their British National (Overseas) passports to emigrate

Shortly before Hong Kong was handed back to China, Simon Ng applied for a British National (Overseas) passport, a document he never thought he'd need. Now he is considering whether to use it to emigrate.

China's plan to impose a sweeping national security law on the city in response to huge pro-democracy protests has Ng mulling the prospect of leaving, the first time he has contemplated such action since Britain returned the former colony in 1997.

"Back then, like many of my peers, I thought China would reform and there was hope," the 52-year-old assistant professor told AFP.

"But now, this is really a dark moment, and the future is quite likely to be even worse."

BN(O) status was the product of an earlier round of similar fears.

The run up to the 1997 handover was a febrile time.

While Ng was optimistic, many other Hong Kongers worried about what rule by authoritarian communist China might mean for the city's freedoms and thriving capitalist system.

As a result Britain offered anyone born before handover the option of applying for a BN(O) passport.

The document was of limited value. It gave Hong Kongers access to British consular services overseas and permission to travel to the UK for up to six months at a time, but not to live or work there.

But it was recognition that Britain had some sort of responsibility to the people who were once its subjects.

Now the usefulness of the document could all change after China last month unveiled plans to enact a law banning acts of subversion, secession, terrorism and foreign interference.

- 'Path to citizenship' -

Beijing says the law -- which will bypass Hong Kong's legislature -- is needed to tackle "terrorism", "separatism" and restore confidence in a city rocked by a year of unrest.

But critics fear it will bring mainland-style political oppression to a business hub supposedly guaranteed freedoms and autonomy for 50 years after its handover.

Britain views the law as a breach of that handover deal and in response has said it will look into extending the immigration rights of those with BN(O) status, including a possible "path to citizenship".

There are currently some 350,000 BN(O) passport holders -- a figure that nearly doubled in the last twelve months during as the crackdown on pro-democracy protesters raged.

But some 2.9 million people -- anyone born before 1997 -- are eligible for BN(O) status and Britain has said any citizenship plan will also include them.

The announcement has sparked fury in Beijing which has in turn accused London of breaching its handover commitments.

In recent weeks Hong Kongers have flocked to sign up, forming queues outside post offices and courier companies to send documents.

But Ng says he faces a dilemma -- neither his wife, nor their two children have BN(O) status and Britain has yet to say whether family will be included.

"I am propelled to leave but I am also helpless, like being pushed into the sea with no boat to board," Ng said.

- Youngsters keen to leave -

A recent survey of more than 800 Hong Kongers by the Chinese University found those aged between 18 and 24 reported the strongest desire to emigrate, with over 50 per cent considering it.

Yet most of those under 23-year-old, who formed the bedrock of last year's protests, are not currently eligible for BN(O) status.

Recent graduate Asuka Law, 23, was three months old at handover so is eligible for (BN(O) status. She is planning to leave as soon as October, using a scheme Britain offers people under 30 from certain countries to live and work there for two years.

She fears the right to dissent will soon disappear from Hong Kong.

"I don't think I have that much time left," Law said. "It's hard to do anything more in this city as every single objection will be met with an iron fist."

She said she wants to start a business overseas to help fellow Hong Kongers.

"Someone will have to do the job of providing a safety shelter," she said.

Law's friend Reese Tan, a 25-year old tutor, is also trying the youth scheme.

He vowed to continue his "fight for Hong Kong" overseas by joining campaigns for international support.

"I am not escaping. Hong Kong will always be my home," Tan said.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMiY2h0dHBzOi8vcGgubmV3cy55YWhvby5jb20vZmVhcmZ1bC1ob25nLWtvbmdlcnMtcnVzaC1zZWN1cmUtbGltaXRlZC1icml0aXNoLXBhc3Nwb3J0cy0wMjM0NDgzNTIuaHRtbNIBa2h0dHBzOi8vcGgubmV3cy55YWhvby5jb20vYW1waHRtbC9mZWFyZnVsLWhvbmcta29uZ2Vycy1ydXNoLXNlY3VyZS1saW1pdGVkLWJyaXRpc2gtcGFzc3BvcnRzLTAyMzQ0ODM1Mi5odG1s?oc=5

2020-06-12 02:34:00Z
CBMiY2h0dHBzOi8vcGgubmV3cy55YWhvby5jb20vZmVhcmZ1bC1ob25nLWtvbmdlcnMtcnVzaC1zZWN1cmUtbGltaXRlZC1icml0aXNoLXBhc3Nwb3J0cy0wMjM0NDgzNTIuaHRtbNIBa2h0dHBzOi8vcGgubmV3cy55YWhvby5jb20vYW1waHRtbC9mZWFyZnVsLWhvbmcta29uZ2Vycy1ydXNoLXNlY3VyZS1saW1pdGVkLWJyaXRpc2gtcGFzc3BvcnRzLTAyMzQ0ODM1Mi5odG1s