Skip to content

Hong Kong Leader Tells Locals to Be Good Citizens for China on Anniversary of Million-Strong Protest

  • Asia

After Pandemic, California Oyster Farmer Confident in Industry’s Return

MARSHALL, Calif.—While most businesses across the United States remained shuttered due to the coronavirus pandemic, Terry Sawyer, co-founder of Hog Island Oyster Co, had plenty of work to stay busy. Even though revenue at Hog Island has dropped by two-thirds since the beginning of the year, forcing pay cuts as well as employee furloughs, the water tanks at the northern California oyster farm continued to buzz and bubble with activity. “When you have something that takes anywhere from a year to three years to get to market size once you plant it, you can’t just ignore it,” Sawyer said. Hog Island, which leases 160 acres scattered in four locations across the picturesque Tomales Bay, furloughed 90 percent of its more than 300 staff members across six eateries and a nursery.…

Hong Kong Leader Tells Locals to Be Good Citizens for China on Anniversary of Million-Strong Protest

One year after Hong Kong witnessed the dramatic escalation of ongoing anti-CCP, pro-democracy protests, city leader Carrie Lam has requested for Hongkongers to leave behind the chaos of the past year to become good citizens of China its the ruling Chinese Communist Party (CCP).

“The immediate issue is to prove that ‘one country, two systems’ work well in Hong Kong,” Lam said in her weekly press conference on June 9. “[T]o prove that Hong Kong people are reasonable and sensible citizens of the People’s Republic of China—that we could be trusted to continue to have our own way of life, and our own way of systems within the whole country.”

Lam was responding to a reporter’s question about remarks made by Zhang Xiaoming, the deputy director of the Hong Kong and Macau Affairs Office—Beijing’s top agency for handling those territories’ policies.

Speaking at an online seminar on Hong Kong’s Basic Law, Zhang suggested on June 8 that Hongkong’s protesters needed to behave if Beijing was ever to consider extending the “one country, two systems” agreement with Britain past 2047.

Under the handover agreement—the Sino-British Joint Declaration—signed in 1984, Hong Kong’s mini-constitution or Basic Law was drafted, which is meant to guarantee the city a high degree of autonomy for at least 50 years after 1997.

In response to Zhang’s comments, U.S. Rep. Ted Yoho (R-Fla.) said that Beijing’s recent actions had already compromised Hong Kong’s autonomy.

“Aside from HongKong no longer being autonomous from mainland China due to unilateral actions from the CCP, suggesting Hong Kong ‘behave’ itself after its freedoms have been stripped and its people have been met with police brutality is beyond insulting,” the congressman said on Twitter.

Hong Kong Leader Tells Locals to Be Good Citizens for China on Anniversary of Million-Strong Protest A protester holds up a sign urging U.S. President Trump to free Hong Kong on Sept. 8, 2019. (Yu Gang/The Epoch Times)

Precisely one year ago, over 1 million Hongkongers took to the street to protest the pro-Beijing Lam government’s now fully-scrapped extradition bill—marking a significant escalation in the ongoing anti-CCP movement. The following weekend, an estimated 2 million Hongkongers continued their calls for their freedoms to be protected from abuse by the CCP.

Hong Kong Leader Tells Locals to Be Good Citizens for China on Anniversary of Million-Strong Protest Unsatisfied with the government’s suspension of the controversial extradition bill, an estimated 2 million Hong Kongers took the streets on June 16, 2019, to demand the bill’s full retraction and Hong Kong leader Carrie Lam’s resignation. (Gang Yu/The Epoch Times)

At that time, people had taken to the streets out of fear that the city’s judicial autonomy would be eroded since people living and traveling through Hong Kong could be extradited to China and put on trial in their courts, which are subordinate to the ruling Communist Party.

Protesters’ demand to see the extradition bill scrapped slowly evolved in calls to ensure autonomy from Beijing, including universal suffrage. Recently, local protesters added one new demand—opposition to Beijing’s proposed national security law for Hong Kong, which would make any criticism of the CCP a crime in the former British colony.

Hong Kong Leader Tells Locals to Be Good Citizens for China on Anniversary of Million-Strong Protest A protester holds a poster produced by The Epoch Times that reads: “Heaven Will Destroy the CCP,” in a rally in Chater Garden, Hong Kong, on Dec. 23, 2019. (Sung Pi-lung/The Epoch Times)

Lam spoke of her views on how Hong Kong citizens should act: they should support Beijing’s national security law; everyone, including her cabinet and local lawmakers, should “learn some lessons” from the “chaos” seen in Hong Kong over the past year; and people should not take part in any proposed referendums since there is no legal basis for such actions under Hong Kong’s Basic Law. She also advised against general strikes opposing the national security law.

Hong Kong Leader Tells Locals to Be Good Citizens for China on Anniversary of Million-Strong Protest A protester is arrested by riot police during a clash in Wong Tai Sin district in Hong Kong on Oct. 1, 2019. (Anthony Kwan/Getty Images)

A coalition of more than 20 labor unions and a student group announced on Saturday that they will hold an internal referendum for its members on June 14, reported local media RTHK. The referendum will determine if they will hold a general strike against the national security law.

On Monday evening, Lam again defended the need for Beijing’s national security law, saying in a Facebook post that the law would provide a “stable and secure social environment in the city.”

Civil Human Rights Front (CHRF), the organizer of the June 9 rally last year, which drew support from over 1 million Hongkongers, issued an anniversary statement, saying that the day marked “the beginning of our togetherness in defending our beloved city.”

“In the past year, we have been steadfastly resisting police brutality, triads, evil laws, and white terror.”

CHRF also announced that it will file an application to hold a mass rally on July 1 to resist the “evil” national security law and to “fight hard” for Hong Kong and its future. On July 1 last year, about 550,000 Hongkongers marched in another rally organized by CHRF against the extradition bill.

“We fought the extradition bill then, we fight the national security law now. The [Chinese] regime is growingly aggressive and repressive, the world knows more clearly what CCP China is like,” Lo Kin-hei, city councilor and vice-chairman of the local Democratic Party, said on Twitter after Lam’s presser.

Focus News: Hong Kong Leader Tells Locals to Be Good Citizens for China on Anniversary of Million-Strong Protest

Hope for the Impossible

During the 19th century, at the height of the Enlightenment, neoclassicists and romanticists debated the purpose of art. The neoclassicists looked back to ancient Greece and Rome for guidance. They were concerned with reestablishing order and structure in their artistic creations. Often, neoclassical paintings, like Jacques-Louis David’s “Oath of the Horatii,” looked to accurately illustrate historical stories down to the dress and architecture. The romanticists, however, felt that the neoclassicists were missing out on the emotional component of art. For instance, the romanticists believed that contemporary stories had a great ability to emotionally stir the souls who witnessed them. Romanticists wanted their artistic creations to have heightened emotional impact. As a romanticist, Théodore Géricault, a French painter of the 19th century, wanted to create emotionally charged works of art based on…