Skip to content

CCP’s Suppression of Hong Kong Is ‘Wake-Up Call’ to Free World: Democracy Activist Nathan Law

Hong Kong exiled pro-democracy activist Nathan Law holds a placard outside the Italian Foreign Ministry headquarter as he speaks to media, during the meeting between Italian Foreign Minister and his Chinese counterpart in Rome on Aug. 25, 2020. A member of the pro-democracy political organisation Demosisto and disqualified lawmaker, Nathan Law fled from Hong Kong after Beijing's new security law was imposed on Hong Kong on 30 June. (Tiziana Fabi/AFP via Getty Images)

rise of communist China is an “existential crisis” for liberal democracies around the world, according to Hong Kong democracy activist Nathan Law.

“Hong Kong is a prime example of how an authoritarian regime can erode a free city… global leaders can learn from it,” Law, the author of “Freedom: How We Lose It and How We Fight Back,” told TV’s “American Thoughts Leaders” program on Dec. 14.

Related Coverage

CCP’s Suppression of Hong Kong Is ‘Wake-Up Call’ to Free World: Democracy Activist Nathan LawNathan Law: Communist China’s Rise Is ‘Existential Crisis’ for Liberal Democracies

“What’s happening in Hong Kong, what’s happening in Xinjiang, as the rest of China is a wake-up call to the world. It is not just about … helping people in Hong Kong or helping people in Xinjiang, it’s about how we can defend democracy,” he added.

Law, who rose to prominence as an activist during the city’s pro-democracy Umbrella Movement in 2014 and is now self-exiled in London, has experienced the Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP) suppression first hand.

“For me … the decline of democracy and the rise of authoritarianism is not an abstract theory, it is a painful and personal story,” he said.

In the past seven years, “[I went] from a student protest leader to the youngest elected legislator in Hong Kong. [n] I was disqualified, became an inmate and … [now I am an] exiled activist,” Law said.

Law said Hong Kong’s freedom had been deteriorating for years, but it “fell off the cliff” in June 2020, when the regime in Beijing imposed the national security law.

Hong Kong, a former British colony, has experienced waves of citywide protests since the region was handed over to the Chinese regime in 1997, as the CCP has incrementally rolled back the city’s freedoms and autonomy—something it had guaranteed would remain in place for 50 years after the handover.

Chinese Communist Party today is literally more technologically sophisticated than the one in 1984, the Orwellian state, and the world has not developed anything to hold them accountable.
— Nathan Law

In mid-2020, following large-scale democracy protests in the Chinese-ruled territory a year earlier, Beijing imposed the draconian national security law, which significantly stifles freedom of speech and freedom of association in the city. law gives the Chinese regime sweeping powers to target individuals for any acts deemed by Beijing as secession, subversion, terrorism, or collusion with foreign forces. Offenders, if convicted, could be imprisoned for life.

Scores of activists have been arrested and jailed, or have fled Hong Kong since then.

‘Democratic Recession’

Law said that allowing the Chinese regime into international organizations, such as the World Trade Organization, was like inviting a “wolf into the house,” since the free world hasn’t developed proper mechanisms to control its behavior.

world engaged with China politically and economically, expecting the communist country would become more liberal, Law said. Instead, China moved in the exact opposite direction.

Such inclusion in the international community brought China wealth and technology that aided the Chinese communist regime to become more powerful and authoritarian, and even totalitarian, according to Law.

“ Chinese Communist Party today is literally more technologically sophisticated than the one in 1984, the Orwellian state, and the world has not developed anything to hold them accountable,” he said.

As a result, we are experiencing a “democratic recession”, and must counter the rise of authoritarianism, he said. “We should definitely be united to push back on the authoritarian expansion from the Chinese Communist Party.”

Those defending democracy must “be like water,” Law said, echoing a remark by Hong Kong martial arts legend Bruce Lee that was adopted by Hong Kong activists. That’s because they must adapt to counter threats and obstacles when confronted with the world’s most repressive authoritarian power.

“Truth” is the CCP’s weakness, he said. “y censor every possible gateway of delivering truth in mainland China and it’s probably coming to Hong Kong.”

When asked about what people in mainland China could do to resist the CCP, Law advised them not to be “swallowed by the world of China’s propaganda.”

Related Coverage

CCP’s Suppression of Hong Kong Is ‘Wake-Up Call’ to Free World: Democracy Activist Nathan LawNathan Law: Communist China’s Rise Is ‘Existential Crisis’ for Liberal Democracies

“If you want to know more, and you want to keep safe, make sure that you have the readiness to live a double life. You have one phone with WeChat, one phone with Twitter; you have one phone with Baidu, one phone with Google. Protect yourself and … get a better understanding about what and what we are fighting for,” he said.

Pezou : CCP’s Suppression of Hong Kong Is ‘Wake-Up Call’ to Free World: Democracy Activist Nathan Law