Hong Kong, the darkest hour has yet to come

Bitter Winter publishes exclusive footage of the police repression. “Is there any country welcoming Hong Kong people now?”

by Marco Respinti

On May 27, Causeway Bay Hong Kong Protest
On May 27, Causeway Bay Hong Kong Protest (Supplied by Ming)

 

On May 27, Causeway Bay Hong Kong Protest
On May 27, Causeway Bay Hong Kong Protest (Supplied by Ming)

On May 28, China imposed a new security law on Hong Kong, significantly eroding its fundamental liberties. Sadly, the nightmare anticipated by Mr. Benedict Rogers, one of the world’s leading experts of human rights issues in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, became true.

“Jo Pang” is the pseudonym of an independent journalist in Hong Kong. She has been in the middle of the protest, corresponding with Bitter Winter. “Honk Kong is at the eye of the political storm now,” she told me.  “At least I am glad that the illusion of ‘One country, two systems’ finally disappeared, and the true face of CCP is exposed to the world.”

In fact, the Chinese regime has never tolerated a “political island” like Hong Kong after the city-territory went back to China in 1997. It had to buy it at face-value until it had the strength to suppress it, and apparently that moment is now. Possibly the coronavirus crisis, with the “Chinese model” being credited as the savior of the world even by too many democratic media and observers in the world, has offered this chance. The smashing of the “Umbrella movement” in 2014, and the new democratic coalition in late 2019 and early 2020, have been just setting the stage. Now all, or near all, is accomplished.

On May 26, hours before the fatal event, “Jo Pang” visited Mongkok, one of the major shopping areas in the city, the historical heart of the protest against its puppet government and its CCP master. She filmed exclusive footage for Bitter Winter.

In these staggering scenes, 10 policemen overpower and arrest a young man when he slams the policemen as “black cops,” i.e. thugs colluded with organized crime. The disparity and the exaggeration are blatantly evident. Then, after they see the young man overpowered by agents, some brave senior Hong Kong people point their fingers to the police’s brutality, shouting “Shame on you and the CCP!”. At that point, the police denounced the gathering as an illegal assembly and attempted to disperse the crowd. “Jo Pang” wasn’t able to film the latter scene.

“In Mongkok, a popular tourist area filled with protestors along the Dundas Street, Shandong Street and Nathan Road, barricades were set and some of them were on fire,” she commented. “Police deployed teargas to the crowd and protesters had to run away: but they didn’t want to leave the site. A friend of mine bought me two bottles of water, one was for drinking, and one was for cleaning eyes, in case anyone got pepper-sprayed.”

Her concern is the same of all democratic citizens of Hong Kong now. “When defending one’s home ends up in being punished, some keep on fighting for their future, but some are scared and try to find a way to leave Hong Kong. The point is: Is there any country welcoming Hong Kong people?”

After days of protest and repression, the danger is not over: “We know,” “Jo Pang” says, “that the darkest hour has yet to come.”

 

Source: Bitter Winter