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North Coast Journal: Wide-eyed in China by ANDREW EDWARDS
"Tomorrow, don't go down there," my friend Cindy, a native to this uber-capitalist
city state of 7.3 million, had said Monday night, pointing toward the western
end of Hong Kong island. The multi-hued lights glistened off the wake-churned
harbor, in Willie Nelson's words, "like 10 million jewels in the sky."
"Why not?" I asked. We were at dinner in a restaurant on the Peak, the
highest point on the island, with an incomparable view of the entire city.
"There's going to be a protest down there, tens of thousands of people," she
said, "Article 23, you know what I'm talking about?"
I'd actually been reading about it in the local papers ever since I'd arrived
in the city.
Article 23 is sort of the local version of the Patriot Act. It's a "national
security measure" pushed by the central government in Beijing to help fight
domestic "terrorism."
As a "Special Administrative Region" of China, Hong Kong was promised 50
years of the freedoms it enjoyed under 99 years of benignly oligarchic British
rule when it was handed back over to China on the midnight of June 30, 1997.
These freedoms include freedom of speech, press and assembly as well as freedom
from unlawful search and seizures.
But the new law would allow police raids without a warrant as well as ban any
groups that Beijing concluded were threats to national security. This is the
same government, mind you, that brought you the Tiananmen Square massacre of
1989, and recently banned the Falun Gong movement, not to mention killing more
than 50 of the group's imprisoned leaders.
These things have been par for course in post-9/11 representative democracies
these days, but in Hong Kong, where all of the meaningful political leaders are
appointed by the architects of the sprawling socialist state just over the
border, the whole thing seems a bit more sinister. After all, in theory, in the
United States, if we don't like the alterations to our basic rights that our
government has made on our behalf, we can just kick the leaders out in the next
election cycle.
There is no similar option in Hong Kong, so they have to make their feelings
known in the street. Most of the people I talked to said that they felt they had
to fight for their freedoms now, on the "give 'em an inch and they'll take a
mile" premise, or eventually they'd have nothing left.
I had to see it for myself.
"That's just the kind of thing I'm traveling to see," I told Cindy.
So the next day, an unseasonably warm one even for semitropical Hong Kong, I
made my way down the mountain from my hostel home and into the city to the huge
park. It sits just west of the city center, on the ocean, surrounded by 50-story
high-rise apartments framed by the jungle slopes that dominate the center of the
island.
At first it seemed like nothing was going to happen. I walked the park,
stopped to listen to an impassioned speech in Cantonese delivered by an
white-bearded man surrounded by a sea of umbrellas.
And then, the march arrived.
It had started at the old city hall, maybe a kilometer away. A huge solemn
thing, broken by the occasional shrill chant, it broke upon the park like a dark
tidal sea, sweeping in through every conceivable entrance toward the large open
field at the park's center.
With the heat, the smell, bodies packed so tight I couldn't move, and waves
of speeches and songs breaking over us, I began to feel I was drowning in what
was a largely incomprehensible political fervor. It was frightening.
Eventually, I ran out of water in my backpack Nalgene bottle and fought my
way free, emotionally and physically exhausted by the heat.
The next day the front page of Hong Kong's South China Morning Post
had a full color picture of the crowd and a banner headline proclaiming "500,000
March in Protest." A full-color magazine featuring pictures of the day's events
hit the streets almost immediately. But strangely, or perhaps predictably, there
was no mention of the massive event in China's mainland press.
"Article 23 Good for Hong Kong," the China Daily proclaimed, quoting a
Communist Party official in a style that reminded me of how the U.S. media
treats the dubious pronouncements of the Bush administration.
Several days later, in Chengdu, I watched a television account of the day's
events, which had been timed to coincide with the sixth anniversary of Hong
Kong's return to China. The cameras blindly followed the actions of smiling
officials at the staged commemoration where the march started, when in front of
them, behind the cameras, unmentioned crowds of placard-waving protesters went
unseen.
http://www.northcoastjournal.com/071003/news0710.html#anchor685658 Posting date: 7/13/2003
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