Beijing’s growing crackdown on dissent in Hong Kong

China has moved to crush Hong Kong’s pro-democracy movement after huge and violent protests rocked the finance hub last year, hammering the flickering freedoms and autonomy it promised the finance hub could keep after British colonial rule ended in 1997.

Here are the key developments from recent months in Beijing’s crackdown on dissent.

– First confirmation of security law  –

On May 22 China’s top legislative body, the National People’s Congress Standing Committee (NPCSC), unveils plans to strengthen “enforcement mechanisms” in Hong Kong. 

A draft proposal for a new security law is published saying it will “guard against, stop and punish any separatism, subversion of the national regime, terrorist group activities and such behaviours that seriously harm national security”.

In a major departure from norms, Beijing announces the law will not be debated and passed by Hong Kong’s legislature, which failed to bring in a similar law in 2003 following huge protests. 

Instead it will be imposed by fiat, an unprecedented direct intervention by the central government. 

The precise contents of the legislation are kept hidden from Hong Kong’s 7.5 million residents.

– Law passed –

China’s rubber-stamp legislature unanimously passes the security law on June 30 and it is immediately signed by President Xi Jinping.

The contents are published just one hour before it comes into effect that evening.

It allows Beijing jurisdiction over cases deemed to be serious breaches and introduces life sentences for the worst offences. 

It also allows China’s security agents to operate openly in Hong Kong for the first time and outlaws peaceful political views such as pushing for independence or greater autonomy.

Four young pro-democracy leaders announce the same day they are resigning from their party, Demosisto, which is then disbanded. 

One of them, Nathan Law, flees the territory.

– Activists arrested –

On July 1, the 23rd anniversary of Hong Kong’s return to Chinese rule, the first arrests are made under the new law, mainly for chanting or possessing now banned slogans.

A week later China’s security agents move into a requisitioned hotel which now serves as the force’s headquarters.

More than 30 people have been arrested under the new security law — all by the local police’s new national security unit — including four students for their social media posts.

Twelve people are also arrested in August by Chinese coastguard trying to flee Hong Kong by speedboat for Taiwan.  The group, most of whom were facing charges linked to last year’s protests, disappear into the mainland’s opaque legal system.

– Control over elections –

A month after the security law takes effect, 12 democracy activists, including four sitting lawmakers, are disqualified from running in an upcoming legislative election. 

Officials cite political views such as criticising the national security law, campaigning to win a legislation-blocking majority and refusing to recognise China’s sovereignty.

One day after that, the government postpones the September elections for a whole year, blaming the coronavirus pandemic. 

– Free speech crackdown –

In July, a number of books written by democracy activists are withdrawn from Hong Kong libraries, and three days later the government orders schools to get rid of books that could be in breach of the security law.

Two pro-democracy veterans are sacked by universities after they served jail terms for taking part in protests.

In August, hundreds of police raid the newsroom of pro-democracy newspaper Apple Daily and arrest its owner, media tycoon Jimmy Lai.

In November, a journalist from the public-funded Radio Television Hong Kong is charged with making a false statement while obtaining information on vehicle license plates for an investigation into whether police failed to stop a mob attack on protesters last year.

– Legislature neutered –

Hong Kong authorities disqualify four serving pro-democracy lawmakers because of their views in early November. 

The move comes just minutes after China’s top lawmaking committee rules the city’s government can remove any legislator deemed a threat to national security without going through the courts.

The remaining 15 pro-democracy lawmakers all quit in protest. 

The legislature was only half elected by popular vote, a tactic that ensured a pro-Beijing majority but the resignations reduce the once-feisty chamber to a gathering of Chinese loyalists.