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Wednesday May 11 2022, 6pm BST

Debate: Is Hong Kong Still Free in Ways that Matter?

Politics &
Economics

At 11 pm on June 30, 2020, one hour before the 23rd anniversary of Hong Kong’s handover to China, a new national security law came into effect giving Beijing powers to shape life in the city like never before. The legislation, a response to months of pro-democracy demonstrations, effectively criminalized dissent and adopted broad definitions for crimes such as terrorism, subversion, secession, and collusion with foreign powers. In the almost two years since its introduction, the statute has been used in the arrest of prominent activists and campaigners. For some Hong Kongers, the national security law signals the end of freedom in the city and stands as an example of how Beijing no longer respects the “one country, two systems” principle which has underpinned Hong Kong since its handover in 1998. 

But others in the city feel they still enjoy many important freedoms – and that demanding more is now counter-productive. They point out that the Hong Kong government remains in control of areas including trade, communications, tourism and culture. Hong Kong still benefits from some of the most liberal economic freedoms in the world with international firms like Citigroup and Goldman Sachs increasing their hiring in the city in 2021. And inhabitants still enjoy free access to the internet with sites like Facebook, Google and Twitter freely accessible in the region – unlike in mainland China. Hong Kong is still free but people must start to accept the reality that China is not the West and only by cooperating with Beijing’s longstanding concerns related to internal rebellion and external interference can the city preserve its unique status. 

Who’s right and who’s wrong? Join the debate on May 11, hear the arguments and make up your own mind.

Event Name

Debate: Is Hong Kong Still Free in Ways that Matter?


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Speakers
  • Benedict Rogers

    Chief Executive and cofounder of Hong Kong Watch

  • Christine Loh

    Chief development strategist at the Institute for the Environment at Hong Kong University of Science and Technology

Chair
  • Rana Mitter

    Historian, author and broadcaster

Speakers are subject to change.


Location
  • Online event
Time
  • Wednesday 11 May 2022
  • 6pm to 7pm BST





Speakers

Speakers

Benedict Rogers

Chief Executive and cofounder of Hong Kong Watch


Chief Executive and cofounder of Hong Kong Watch a charity which researches and monitors threats to Hong Kong’s basic freedoms. He is also cofounder of Conservative Party Human Rights Commission and senior analyst for Christian Solidarity Worldwide. In March 2022 he was threatened by the Hong Kong police that he faces charges of "collusion with foreign forces" if he ever returns to Hong Kong.

Christine Loh

Chief development strategist at the Institute for the Environment at Hong Kong University of Science and Technology


Chief development strategist at the Institute for the Environment at Hong Kong University of Science and Technology. She is a former legislator and government minister in Hong Kong and author of many books including Underground Front: The Chinese Communist Party in Hong Kong
Chair

Rana Mitter

Historian, author and broadcaster


S.T. Lee Chair in US-Asia Relations at the Harvard Kennedy School. He was previously the director of the University China Centre at the University of Oxford, where he was Professor of the History and Politics of Modern China. His recent documentary on contemporary Chinese politics ‘Meanwhile in Beijing’ is available on BBC Sounds, and his writing on contemporary China has appeared recently in Foreign Affairs, the Harvard Business Review, The Spectator, The Critic, and The Guardian. His latest book is China’s Good War: How World War II is Shaping a New Nationalism.

Speakers are subject to change.