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Forty-Four Prominent Americans and Various Organizations in Hong Kong Oppose Article 23
(Clearwisdom.net) Radio Free Asia reported that the panels on Security
and Administration of Justice and Legal Service of Hong Kong Legislative Council
held the fourth public hearing regarding the implementation of Article 23 on
November 28. The report said that student association representatives from many
universities and colleges attended this hearing. Some student representatives
pointed out that several years ago, the Hong Kong government pledged to not
abuse the "Public Security" article. Yet recently, it charged three people with
illegally assembling by using this article. The students worried that the Hong
Kong government would abuse the law after the implementation of Article 23. Some
student associations were also concerned that the Hong Kong government was
attempting to expand the authority of the police while narrowing personal
freedoms and human rights in Hong Kong, and that Article 23 would make young
people feel less safe.
The attendees at a conference for foreign reporters in Hong Kong said that
the definition of "state secret" in Article 23 was vague and would hinder the
free circulation of information. They announced that should Hong Kong restrict
the freedom of the press, all foreign reporters would leave Hong Kong.
Moreover, 44 American politicians, scholars, and human rights' activists
cosigned a letter addressed to President Bush. In the letter, they asked the
United States government to utilize its influence to prevent the implementation
of Article 23 in Hong Kong. The letter was initiated by a U.S. intelligence
advisory organization "Project for the New American Century" and the U.S.
Committee for Hong Kong. The people who signed the letter included former United
States Attorney General Thornburgh, Founding Chair of the Human Rights Watch
Robert L. Bernstein, and several former and present members of U.S. Congress.
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