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Five Eyes: China Running a ‘Concerted Campaign’ to Silence Critics in Hong Kong

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Parler CEO Defends Free Speech: ‘It’s Not Against the Law to Have Those Opinions’

The CEO of Parler, which has been described as an alternative to Twitter, defended free speech in an interview on Tuesday in the midst of mainstream media-led criticism of the social media platform. “People say crazy things all the time,” and “it’s not against the law to have those opinions,” Parler CEO John Matze told Fox News. He was responding to a question about why establishment media outlets have taken an increasingly critical tone against the platform. “I always ask them, ‘What do you think of the First Amendment? Do you believe that we should have somebody in New York, let’s say in the middle of Times Square, telling you what you can and cannot say?’” Matze said. “Because that’s what these companies are doing.” “I don’t know why they’re…

Five Eyes: China Running a ‘Concerted Campaign’ to Silence Critics in Hong Kong

The allied Foreign Ministers of Australia, Canada, New Zealand, and the UK, as well as the U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, have condemned the Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP) actions in Hong Kong in a rare joint statement published Thursday.

The Five Eyes foreign representatives declared that Beijing was running a “concerted campaign to silence all critical voices” in Hong Kong and that the CCP had breached the legally binding Sino-British Joint Declaration for the third time when it disqualified elected legislators in Hong Kong last week.

The communist regime had previously breached the Joint Declaration, the allies said, with the imposition of the national security law and its postponement of the Legislative Council elections in September. 

China’s action is a clear breach of its international obligations,” the statement said.

“The disqualification rules appear part of a concerted campaign to silence all critical voices following the postponement of September’s Legislative Council elections, the imposition of charges against a number of elected legislators, and actions to undermine the freedom of Hong Kong’s vibrant media,” they said.

Five Eyes: China Running a ‘Concerted Campaign’ to Silence Critics in Hong Kong Legislative Council chamber is seen after Alvin Yeung Ngok-kiu, Kwok Ka-ki, Kenneth Leung and Dennis Kwok were disqualified when Beijing passed a new dissent resolution in Hong Kong, China Nov. 11, 2020. (Tyrone Siu/REUTERS)

Calling on the Chinese regime to stop undermining its binding commitment that Hong Kong would enjoy a “high degree of autonomy” and the right to free speech, the ministers said for the sake of Hong Kong’s stability and prosperity, the Chinese regime needs to respect the channels for the people of Hong Kong to express their legitimate concerns and opinions.

The publication of the statement by the Five Eyes nations comes after an unofficial list of the CCP’s grievances with Australia were leaked from the Chinese Embassy in Canberra to The Sydney Morning Herald, The Age, and the Nine Network.

The Nine Network, which obtained a copy of the list, said it allegedly contained 14 complaints from China, including Australia’s ban on Huawei from the new 5G network after it was deemed a national security risk, the successful call for a World Health inquiry into the origins of COVID-19—which the CCP said was allegedly part of the Trump administration’s anti-China campaign, the creation of Foreign Interference Laws—which the communist regime “viewed as targeting China and in the absence of any evidence,” and for speaking out on human rights allegations—which the CCP alleged was the Morrison government peddling lies.

Five Eyes: China Running a ‘Concerted Campaign’ to Silence Critics in Hong Kong Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison speaks during a media conference at Parliament House in Canberra, Australia, on July 9, 2020. (David Gray/Getty Images)

Prime Minister Scott Morrison dismissed the list on Thursday, telling the Today show that Australia would not be compromising on issues of national importance.

“We won’t be compromising on the fact that we will set what our foreign investment laws are or how we build our 5G telecommunications networks or how we run our systems of protecting against interference,” Morrison said. “We won’t be changing any of that.”

Morrison noted the Chinese regime’s complaints included reported criticisms of Australia’s free press, saying, “We won’t be changing that in Australia either. So we’ll continue to be ourselves. We will stand up for our national interests, but we’ll engage with our partners respectively.”

Focus News: Five Eyes: China Running a ‘Concerted Campaign’ to Silence Critics in Hong Kong

Pentagon Says It Shot Down Unarmed Missile in Sea-Based Test

WASHINGTON—In a first for the Pentagon’s push to develop defenses against intercontinental-range ballistic missiles capable of striking the United States, a missile interceptor launched from a U.S. Navy ship at sea hit and destroyed a mock ICBM in flight on Tuesday, officials said. Previous tests against ICBM targets had used interceptors launched from underground silos in the United States. If further, more challenging tests prove successful, the ship-based approach could add to the credibility and reliability of the Pentagon’s existing missile defense system. The success of Tuesday’s test is likely to draw particular interest from North Korea, whose development of intercontinental-range ballistic missiles and nuclear weapons is the main reason the Pentagon has sought to accelerate its building of missile defense systems over the past decade. North Korea has recently refrained from…