Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Hong Kong continues crackdown on freedom of assembly, arresting members of group behind Tiananmen Square commemoration
Hong Kong continues crackdown on freedom of assembly, arresting members of group behind Tiananmen Square commemoration
Jun 15, 2026 9:59 PM

The e after multiple social groups have had no choice but to disband amid increasing pressure from the National Security Laws, which bans anything the Chinese Communist Party, or CCP, perceives to be a threat to national security.

Read More…

Several members of a Hong Kong group that organizes an annual vigil for memoration of the Tiananmen Square Massacre were arrested on Sept. 8 after they refused to provide information for a police investigation.

The group, The Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Democratic Movements in China, has been under investigation since Aug. 25. Hong Kong authorities requested information, due on Sept. 7, on its membership, finances, and activities. The Alliance said the police inquired whether the group was colluding, with foreign powers, which is an offense punishable under the Beijing-imposed National Security Law, or NSL.

The New York Times reported that at least four members of the group were detained on Sept. 8, including its vice chairwoman, Chow Hang Tung. Her arrest was documented live on Facebook for the general public to witness, as Ms. Chow posted updates and asked, “Does anybody have any parting words they’d like to share with me?”

“Any words of farewell for me?” Chow asked, while police is presumably pressing her door bell. /a0Iq1sUxJw

— Alvin Lum (@alvinllum) September 7, 2021

Sept. 7 was the deadline Hong Kong authorities set for information on the Alliance. Hong Kong police pliance from the group, but instead the Alliance sent back a formal rejection.

After the Alliance’s rejection, Chris Tang, Hong Kong’s security secretary, promised Hong Kong authorities would respond quickly. Many questions and speculations have been brought against the Alliance, including if it had acted as a foreign agent by receiving funds from overseas.

Tang defends the arrests, saying “it’s very clearly stated in the law” that “foreign agents include those who receive money or support from overseas political parties or political organizations, and then act to the benefit of those foreign organizations.”

The e after multiple social groups have had no choice but to disband amid increasing pressure from the NSL, which bans anything the Chinese Communist Party, or CCP, perceives to be a threat to national security.

Since the NSL’s passage in June 2020, police have arrested over 150 citizens, numerous social groups have disbanded and businesses have dissolved due to the law’s harsh and broad restrictions.

Among the shuttered social groups are the Civil Rights Human Front, or CRHF, a group similar to the Alliance that organized of large scale pro-democracy protests, as well as the Hong Kong Speech Therapists Union, whose executives were arrested for publishing a children’s book that portrays democratic ideals.

The NSL has crippled businesses, as well. Just last week, one of the last prominent pro-democracy outlets, Next Digital Media, announced its closure for the safety of its employees and affiliates.

The CCP’s intimidation and intense restrictions have not only quashed free expression, the CCP has also hamstrung Hong Kong social life and economic enterprise, two ponents of a prosperous society.

“They are trying to intimidate the people who participate in social movements,” Chow said to reporters on Sept. 5. In addition, she pushed back against claims that the Alliance colluded with foreign powers, saying “if you must say we are agents of anything, we are the agents of the Hong Kong people’s conscience.”

The vigil that the Alliance organized memorated the Tiananmen Square Massacre, an event that took place on June 4, 1989, when Chinese troops murdered student protesters and activists.

Each year, thousands of participants flocked to Victoria Park to remember those who were killed by police. Last year, the vigil was banned on the grounds that it violated COVID regulations. This year’s vigil was largely blocked by police, who intimidated individuals and groups from participating.

By missing the government’s deadline to cooperate with investigations, members of the Alliance now may face up to six months in jail and HK$100,000 in fines.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
The Pickpocket Huntress of Barcelona’s Subways
While riding the subway in her hometown of Barcelona, Eliana Guerrero saw pickpockets steal a case of insulin from two elderly tourists. That crime motivated Guerrero to do something for help her city. “I try to solve things that affect me directly,” says Guerrero. “Pickpockets directly affect me because I adore Barcelona.” Since 2009, Guerrero has spend about three a hours a day patrolling Barcelona’s subways looking for pickpockets. “My mother always told me, ‘One swallow doesn’t make a summer....
War on Women: Hypocrisy and Paternalism under the Guise of Equality
“The equal pay issue is rife with myths,” says Elise Hilton in this week’s Acton Commentary. “The myths have a long history in American politics.” With more than a dozen smiling women looking over his shoulder in the East Room of the White House, President Obama signed a proclamation in support of National Equal Pay Day on April 8. The president said he was working to prevent workplace discrimination and helping workers take control over negotiations regarding their pay. “My...
The Counterculture World Of Flannery O’Connor
Flannery O’Connor had a brilliant but short literary career. She died in 1964 at the age of 39 due plications from lupus, yet managed to leave behind a legacy of keen insight into the human condition of sin, in ways some considered repulsive. Her best known story, A Good Man is Hard to Find, is a morality tale of stiff adherence to “good.” O’Connor manages to turn upside-down the moral code of the seemingly “good” people in the story while...
It’s Tax Day: How Generous Do You Feel?
It’s tax day, and though I’m sure you’ve already begun your revelry, I suggest take a moment of silence to relish that warm, fuzzy feeling we get when pressured to pay up or head to the Big House. Indeed, with all of the euphemistic Circle-of-Protection talk bouncing around evangelicalism —reminding us of our “moral obligation” to treat political planners as economic masters and the “least of these” as political pawns —we should be jumping for joy at the opportunity. Nuclear...
The Confusing State Of Religious Liberty In America
Are you confused about religious liberty? Can I do this or say that without losing my job, a friendship, my freedom? Will I get my kid taken away from me? Is there a difference between freedom of religion and freedom of worship? Yeah, we’re all a little confused. At least we’re in pany. Peter Lawler is confused as well, and he shares his confusion at The Federalist. Of course, everyone agrees that church and state should be separate, says Lawler,...
King David on the Heart of Christian Stewardship
We live amid unprecedented economic prosperity, and with the promise of globalization and the continued expansion of opportunity and exchange, such prosperity is bound to grow. Yet if we’re to retain and share these blessings, such gifts need to be received and responded to with a heart of service, sacrifice, and obedience to God. “Man is not the owner,” write Lester DeKoster and Gerard Berghoef. “He is the overseer…Each of us is steward over those talents and those pounds allotted...
The Fountainhead of Satanism
Over the past few years, Anton LaVey and his bookThe Satanic Biblehas grown increasingly popular, selling thousands of new copies. His impact has been especially pronounced in our nation’s capital. One U.S. senator has publicly confessed to being a fan of theThe Satanic Biblewhile another calls it his “foundation book.” On the other side of Congress, a representative speaks highly of LaVey and mends that his staffers read the book. A leading radio host called LaVey “brilliant” and quotations from...
Audio: Sirico on Pope Francis and President Obama
Acton Institute President and Cofounder Rev. Robert A. Sirico joined host Josh Tolley on The Josh Tolley Show on the GCN Radio Network to discuss the recent meeting at the Vatican between Pope Francis and US President Barack Obama. Sirico speaks about the discrepancy between the White House and Vatican recaps of the meeting and how that reflects the different purposes that the leaders had for the meeting as well as their different approach to dealing with social problems. You...
Woman Fights Back Against Occupational Licensing Laws in Mississippi
If you visited a florist would you immediately walk out if you found out it wasn’t licensed by the state? Would a florist shop still know how to perform their job without a state certificate? In most instances occupational licensing laws serve to mercial interests and not the consumer. Far too often these laws work directly against the entrepreneur. Melony Armstrong, who owns “Naturally Speaking,” fought back against the cumbersome and archaic cosmetology licensing laws that tried to prevent her...
University of Michigan Should Resist Racial Bullying
Over the past 20 years or so the University of Michigan has been repeatedly attacked for being “racist” because the university is doing exactly what Dr. Martin Luther King wanted. The university is treating prospective and current students according to their characters and not their color. This explains why the university rejected to admit Detroit native Brooke Kimbrough, an academically mediocre student. Kimbrough is appealing the decision, however, claiming that she should be accepted because the university needs “diversity.” What...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved