Issued on: 15/08/2021
District councillor Tsang Kin-shing (L), convener of Civil Human Rights Front Figo Chan (2nd L) and former lawmaker Leung Kwok-hung (C), also known as Long Hair, Tang Sai Lai (2nd R) and Avery Ng (R) arrive at a district court in Wan Chai on February 25, 2021, to enter a plea on charges of inciting an unauthorised assembly at a protest on July 19, 2019. © Isaac Lawrence, AFP
The Hong Kong protest coalition that organised record-breaking democracy rallies two years ago said Sunday it was disbanding in the face of China's sweeping clampdown on dissent in the city.
The dissolution comes as China remoulds Hong Kong in its own authoritarian image and purges the city of any person or group deemed disloyal or unpatriotic.
The Civil Human Rights Front (CHRF) was a major player in the months of democracy protests that convulsed Hong Kong in 2019.
But the group said Beijing's subsequent crackdown on democracy supporters and a de facto ban on protests had left it with little future.
"All member groups have been suppressed and civil society is facing an unprecedented severe challenge," the Civil Human Rights Front wrote in a statement announcing why it was disbanding
Its remaining HK$1.6 million ($205,000) in assets would be donated to "appropriate groups", the statement added.
The 2019 protests began in response to a deeply unpopular law that would have allowed extraditions from the semi-autonomous city to authoritarian mainland China.
But they soon morphed into calls for greater democracy and police accountability after huge crowds were dispersed with tear gas and rubber bullets.
The CHRF, founded in 2002, espoused non-violence and routinely got crowds of hundreds of thousands strong onto the streets.
Some estimates said more than a million people marched at some rallies, in a city of 7.3 million residents.
But the deliberately leaderless democracy movement became increasingly fierce as clashes escalated between riot police and smaller groups of more hardcore, often young, protesters.
Security law
China's response to protesters has been to dismiss their demands and portray them as part of a foreign plot to destabilise the motherland.
A sweeping national security law was imposed on the city last year that criminalised much dissent and has seen many of the city's democracy leaders jailed for fled overseas.
More than 30 civil society groups have already disbanded, fearful that national security police will come for them next, according to a tally kept by AFP.
Earlier this week the city's biggest union -- the Professional Teachers Union (PTU) -- said it was shutting down after nearly 50 years of operation.
Most of the CHRF's prominent activists, including former leaders Jimmy Sham and Figo Chan, are already behind bars for organising the protests or on national security charges.
But a small group of activists had kept the organisation going at least in name.
National security police had already begun an investigation into the umbrella group over its finances and whether it was properly registered.
Earlier this week police chief Raymond Siu also told a pro-Beijing newspaper the CHRF might have broken the national security law with its 2019 rallies.
Those comments caused alarm because the law -- enacted on 30 June 2020 -- is not supposed to be retroactive.
The dissolution comes as China remoulds Hong Kong in its own authoritarian image and purges the city of any person or group deemed disloyal or unpatriotic.
The Civil Human Rights Front (CHRF) was a major player in the months of democracy protests that convulsed Hong Kong in 2019.
But the group said Beijing's subsequent crackdown on democracy supporters and a de facto ban on protests had left it with little future.
"All member groups have been suppressed and civil society is facing an unprecedented severe challenge," the Civil Human Rights Front wrote in a statement announcing why it was disbanding
Its remaining HK$1.6 million ($205,000) in assets would be donated to "appropriate groups", the statement added.
The 2019 protests began in response to a deeply unpopular law that would have allowed extraditions from the semi-autonomous city to authoritarian mainland China.
But they soon morphed into calls for greater democracy and police accountability after huge crowds were dispersed with tear gas and rubber bullets.
The CHRF, founded in 2002, espoused non-violence and routinely got crowds of hundreds of thousands strong onto the streets.
Some estimates said more than a million people marched at some rallies, in a city of 7.3 million residents.
But the deliberately leaderless democracy movement became increasingly fierce as clashes escalated between riot police and smaller groups of more hardcore, often young, protesters.
Security law
China's response to protesters has been to dismiss their demands and portray them as part of a foreign plot to destabilise the motherland.
A sweeping national security law was imposed on the city last year that criminalised much dissent and has seen many of the city's democracy leaders jailed for fled overseas.
More than 30 civil society groups have already disbanded, fearful that national security police will come for them next, according to a tally kept by AFP.
Earlier this week the city's biggest union -- the Professional Teachers Union (PTU) -- said it was shutting down after nearly 50 years of operation.
Most of the CHRF's prominent activists, including former leaders Jimmy Sham and Figo Chan, are already behind bars for organising the protests or on national security charges.
But a small group of activists had kept the organisation going at least in name.
National security police had already begun an investigation into the umbrella group over its finances and whether it was properly registered.
Earlier this week police chief Raymond Siu also told a pro-Beijing newspaper the CHRF might have broken the national security law with its 2019 rallies.
Those comments caused alarm because the law -- enacted on 30 June 2020 -- is not supposed to be retroactive.
Both the CHRF and the PTU decisions to disband came after multiple pieces were run in China's state media attacking the organisations and calling for Hong Kong authorities to do more to dismantle them.
"For any anti-China and trouble-making forces, it's just a matter of time for them to court their own ruin," China's top state media People's Daily said in a commentary on the PTU on Tuesday.
State media have also singled out two other organisations in recent weeks.
They are the Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Patriotic Democratic Movements of China -- which has historically organised the city's now-banned vigils marking Beijing's deadly Tiananmen Square crackdown -- and the city's biggest pro-democracy labour coalition the Confederation of Trade Unions.
(AFP)
Hong Kong group behind huge democracy rallies disbands
Issued on: 15/08/2021 -
The CHRF routinely got crowds of hundreds of thousands, if not more than a million, onto the streets of Hong Kong Philip FONG AFP/File
Hong Kong (AFP)
The Hong Kong protest coalition that organised record-breaking democracy rallies two years ago said Sunday it was disbanding in the face of China's sweeping clampdown on dissent in the city.
The dissolution comes as China remoulds Hong Kong in its own authoritarian image and purges the city of any person or group deemed disloyal or unpatriotic.
The Civil Human Rights Front (CHRF) was a major player in the months of democracy protests that convulsed Hong Kong in 2019
But the group said Beijing's subsequent crackdown on democracy supporters and a de facto ban on protests had left it with little future.
"All member groups have been suppressed and civil society is facing an unprecedented severe challenge," the Civil Human Rights Front wrote in a statement announcing why it was disbanding.
Its remaining HK$1.6 million ($205,000) in assets would be donated to "appropriate groups", the statement added.
The 2019 protests began in response to a deeply unpopular law that would have allowed extraditions from the semi-autonomous city to authoritarian mainland China.
But they soon morphed into calls for greater democracy and police accountability after huge crowds were dispersed with tear gas and rubber bullets.
The CHRF, founded in 2002, espoused non-violence and routinely got crowds of hundreds of thousands strong onto the streets.
Some estimates said more than a million people marched at some rallies, in a city of 7.3 million residents.
But the deliberately leaderless democracy movement became increasingly fierce as clashes escalated between riot police and smaller groups of more hardcore, often young, protesters.
- Security law -
China's response to protesters has been to dismiss their demands and portray them as part of a foreign plot to destabilise the motherland.
A sweeping national security law was imposed on the city last year that criminalised much dissent and has seen many of the city's democracy leaders jailed for fled overseas.
More than 30 civil society groups have already disbanded, fearful that national security police will come for them next, according to a tally kept by AFP.
Earlier this week the city's biggest union -- the Professional Teachers Union (PTU) -- said it was shutting down after nearly 50 years of operation.
Most of the CHRF's prominent activists, including former leaders Jimmy Sham and Figo Chan, are already behind bars for organising the protests or on national security charges.
But a small group of activists had kept the organisation going at least in name.
National security police had already begun an investigation into the umbrella group over its finances and whether it was properly registered.
Earlier this week police chief Raymond Siu also told a pro-Beijing newspaper the CHRF might have broken the national security law with its 2019 rallies.
Those comments caused alarm because the law -- enacted on 30 June 2020 -- is not supposed to be retroactive.
Both the CHRF and the PTU decisions to disband came after multiple pieces were run in China's state media attacking the organisations and calling for Hong Kong authorities to do more to dismantle them.
"For any anti-China and trouble-making forces, it's just a matter of time for them to court their own ruin," China's top state media People's Daily said in a commentary on the PTU on Tuesday.
State media have also singled out two other organisations in recent weeks.
They are the Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Patriotic Democratic Movements of China -- which has historically organised the city's now-banned vigils marking Beijing's deadly Tiananmen Square crackdown -- and the city's biggest pro-democracy labour coalition the Confederation of Trade Unions.
© 2021 AFP
Hong Kong (AFP)
The Hong Kong protest coalition that organised record-breaking democracy rallies two years ago said Sunday it was disbanding in the face of China's sweeping clampdown on dissent in the city.
The dissolution comes as China remoulds Hong Kong in its own authoritarian image and purges the city of any person or group deemed disloyal or unpatriotic.
The Civil Human Rights Front (CHRF) was a major player in the months of democracy protests that convulsed Hong Kong in 2019
But the group said Beijing's subsequent crackdown on democracy supporters and a de facto ban on protests had left it with little future.
"All member groups have been suppressed and civil society is facing an unprecedented severe challenge," the Civil Human Rights Front wrote in a statement announcing why it was disbanding.
Its remaining HK$1.6 million ($205,000) in assets would be donated to "appropriate groups", the statement added.
The 2019 protests began in response to a deeply unpopular law that would have allowed extraditions from the semi-autonomous city to authoritarian mainland China.
But they soon morphed into calls for greater democracy and police accountability after huge crowds were dispersed with tear gas and rubber bullets.
The CHRF, founded in 2002, espoused non-violence and routinely got crowds of hundreds of thousands strong onto the streets.
Some estimates said more than a million people marched at some rallies, in a city of 7.3 million residents.
But the deliberately leaderless democracy movement became increasingly fierce as clashes escalated between riot police and smaller groups of more hardcore, often young, protesters.
- Security law -
China's response to protesters has been to dismiss their demands and portray them as part of a foreign plot to destabilise the motherland.
A sweeping national security law was imposed on the city last year that criminalised much dissent and has seen many of the city's democracy leaders jailed for fled overseas.
More than 30 civil society groups have already disbanded, fearful that national security police will come for them next, according to a tally kept by AFP.
Earlier this week the city's biggest union -- the Professional Teachers Union (PTU) -- said it was shutting down after nearly 50 years of operation.
Most of the CHRF's prominent activists, including former leaders Jimmy Sham and Figo Chan, are already behind bars for organising the protests or on national security charges.
But a small group of activists had kept the organisation going at least in name.
National security police had already begun an investigation into the umbrella group over its finances and whether it was properly registered.
Earlier this week police chief Raymond Siu also told a pro-Beijing newspaper the CHRF might have broken the national security law with its 2019 rallies.
Those comments caused alarm because the law -- enacted on 30 June 2020 -- is not supposed to be retroactive.
Both the CHRF and the PTU decisions to disband came after multiple pieces were run in China's state media attacking the organisations and calling for Hong Kong authorities to do more to dismantle them.
"For any anti-China and trouble-making forces, it's just a matter of time for them to court their own ruin," China's top state media People's Daily said in a commentary on the PTU on Tuesday.
State media have also singled out two other organisations in recent weeks.
They are the Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Patriotic Democratic Movements of China -- which has historically organised the city's now-banned vigils marking Beijing's deadly Tiananmen Square crackdown -- and the city's biggest pro-democracy labour coalition the Confederation of Trade Unions.
© 2021 AFP
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