• About Us
  • Who Are We
  • Work With Us
Friday, July 11, 2025
No Result
View All Result
The Globe Post
39 °f
New York
44 ° Fri
46 ° Sat
40 ° Sun
41 ° Mon
No Result
View All Result
The Globe Post
No Result
View All Result
Home Democracy at Risk

Hong Kong’s Dragnet Widens 5 Years After National Security Law

Staff Writer by Staff Writer
06/27/25
in Democracy at Risk, Featured, World
Protests in Hong Kong in 2019.

Protesters faced off against police during the huge rally on the streets of Hong Kong in 2019. Photo: Anthony WALLACE via AFP

Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Jailed pro-democracy activist Joshua Wong shrugged and shook his head after a Hong Kong court this month announced a fresh charge of breaching the city’s national security law.

The 28-year-old protest icon has spent more than four years behind bars and hoped to be let out in early 2027.

Now, there is no end in sight.

Monday marks five years since Beijing imposed a national security law after widespread and sometimes violent pro-democracy protests in the finance hub, which Chinese officials saw as a challenge to their rule.

China sees former protest leaders such as Wong as “incorrigible troublemakers”, said John Burns, an honorary professor of politics and public administration at the University of Hong Kong.

“We have a daily drumbeat of national security on TV, in the media,” Burns told AFP.

The new charge against Wong, who was jailed for subversion and unlawful assembly, underscores how Hong Kong authorities are still widening the dragnet.

The national security law criminalized for the first time secession, subversion, terrorism and foreign collusion, with offenders facing up to life imprisonment.

Since the law was introduced, 165 people have been convicted of various national security crimes, including under follow-up legislation in 2024 and colonial-era sedition laws.

The most severely punished was legal academic Benny Tai, who was sentenced in November to 10 years in prison as part of a sprawling subversion case involving 47 opposition figures.

A lawyer, who requested anonymity in order to discuss sensitive cases, said five years spent defending security law clients had laid bare the limits of his role. Of all those charged with national security crimes, only two have been acquitted.

“Our hands are tied,” he told AFP. “Practically the only thing (lawyers) can do is argue for a lighter penalty.”

‘Information Gap’

Authorities have also warned against “soft resistance,” a vague term introduced in 2021 and recently highlighted by Xia Baolong, China’s top official overseeing Hong Kong.

Regina Ip, convenor of the Hong Kong government’s cabinet, told AFP: “I don’t think the government is being paranoid.

“Because of the increasingly complex and volatile international environment, we all need to be alert,” she added.

Beijing security officials in Hong Kong also took part in “interviews” this month with collusion suspects for the first time, authorities said.

Eric Lai, a research fellow at the Georgetown Center for Asian Law, said the city was adapting approaches from mainland China, such as “invitation to tea” – a practice associated with state security agents.

Such informal methods “to regulate and to stabilise society” were favoured because they are “less visible”, Lai said.

Another local lawyer with experience in security cases also noted a worsening “information gap” that has kept the public in the dark.

“There are fewer prosecutions now but more arrests, ‘interviews’ and operations where (people) are not brought to court,” said the lawyer, who requested anonymity.

High-profile legal battles have not ended: the case of media tycoon Jimmy Lai continues, while a trial involving organizers of Hong Kong’s once-annual vigil marking Beijing’s deadly Tiananmen Square crackdown has not yet begun.

Wave of Departures

Scores of pro-democracy and civil society groups, including trade unions and media outlets, have closed since 2020, and the ouster of opposition lawmakers has had “massive consequences for accountability,” said Burns.

Hong Kong’s Democratic Party has begun a process that will lead to its dissolution, while local media reported on Wednesday that the League of Social Democrats, the other remaining opposition party, could fold within days.

The security law has prompted a wave of departures.

Hong Kong independence advocate Tony Chung said he felt unsafe after finishing a prison sentence for secession and fled to the United Kingdom in 2023.

Chung is among 19 people Hong Kong authorities deem to be national security fugitives.

The 24-year-old has at times struggled to adapt while he waits in Britain for political asylum but insists on promoting his separatist views.

“Many friends told me that I can start a new life here and leave politics behind,” he told AFP.

“I see the sun, good weather, a grassy field… But I force myself to remember why I came here.”

ShareTweet
Staff Writer

Staff Writer

AFP with The Globe Post

Related Posts

Women in Afghanistan wearing a blue burqa
Featured

ICC Seeks Arrest of Taliban Leaders Over Persecution of Women

by Staff Writer with AFP
July 9, 2025
Kenya, Nairobi, 2024-07-16. Protesters in the streets
Democracy at Risk

Nairobi Tense as Kenya Marks Democracy Uprising

by Staff Writer with AFP
July 7, 2025
President Donald Trump
Featured

Trump Wins ‘Phenomenal’ Victory as Congress Passes Flagship Bill

by Staff Writer with AFP
July 4, 2025
University students march in protest towards the Istanbul Municipality in Sarachane as they demonstrate against the arrest of Istanbul Mayor Ekrem Imamoglu in Istanbul, Turkey, on March 21, 2025.
World

‘Remember Charlie Hebdo!’ Protesters Seethe at Istanbul Magazine

by Staff Writer with AFP
July 2, 2025
US President Donald Trump
Featured

US Senate Edges Towards Vote on Trump’s Divisive Spending Bill

by Staff Writer with AFP
June 30, 2025
Climate protest in DC, September 20, 2019.
Featured

Lawsuits Against Climate Action on the Rise: Report

by Staff Writer with AFP
June 25, 2025
Next Post
US President Donald Trump

US Senate Edges Towards Vote on Trump’s Divisive Spending Bill

University students march in protest towards the Istanbul Municipality in Sarachane as they demonstrate against the arrest of Istanbul Mayor Ekrem Imamoglu in Istanbul, Turkey, on March 21, 2025.

‘Remember Charlie Hebdo!’ Protesters Seethe at Istanbul Magazine

Please login to join discussion

Recommended

Women in Afghanistan wearing a blue burqa

ICC Seeks Arrest of Taliban Leaders Over Persecution of Women

July 9, 2025
Kenya, Nairobi, 2024-07-16. Protesters in the streets

Nairobi Tense as Kenya Marks Democracy Uprising

July 7, 2025
President Donald Trump

Trump Wins ‘Phenomenal’ Victory as Congress Passes Flagship Bill

July 4, 2025
University students march in protest towards the Istanbul Municipality in Sarachane as they demonstrate against the arrest of Istanbul Mayor Ekrem Imamoglu in Istanbul, Turkey, on March 21, 2025.

‘Remember Charlie Hebdo!’ Protesters Seethe at Istanbul Magazine

July 2, 2025
US President Donald Trump

US Senate Edges Towards Vote on Trump’s Divisive Spending Bill

June 30, 2025
Protests in Hong Kong in 2019.

Hong Kong’s Dragnet Widens 5 Years After National Security Law

June 27, 2025

Opinion

Donald Trump

Fact vs. Fiction: The Trump Administration’s Dubious War on Reverse Discrimination

June 18, 2025
Tens of thousands of protestors shut down Fifth Avenue in Manhattan on Saturday, April 5, 2025, protesting the Trump administration's abuse of the separation of federal powers as well as the deep cuts to governmental services overseen by presidential advisor Elon Musk.

Civil Society Is Holding the Line. Will Washington Notice?

June 17, 2025
A Black Lives Matter mural in New York City.

Fuhgeddaboudit! America’s Erasure of History

April 2, 2025
Bust of Deputy Rubens Paiva in the Chamber of Deputies

Democratic Brazilians Are Still Here

March 18, 2025
A woman from Guatemala

Dispatch From Central America

January 28, 2025
US President Donald Trump

Dear Trump Supporters: Is This the America You Wanted?

January 28, 2025
Facebook Twitter

Newsletter

Do you like our reporting?
SUBSCRIBE

About Us

The Globe Post

The Globe Post is part of Globe Post Media, a U.S. digital news organization that is publishing the world's best targeted news sites.

submit oped

© 2018 The Globe Post

No Result
View All Result
  • National
  • World
  • Business
  • Interviews
  • Lifestyle
  • Democracy at Risk
    • Media Freedom
  • Opinion
    • Editorials
    • Columns
    • Book Reviews
    • Stage
  • Submit Op-ed

© 2018 The Globe Post