The tentacles of Hong Kongs national security laws reach Australia
Inside the Lucky Dumpling Market on the Moon Lantern Trail, Janet Leung wanted to put up some umbrellas.
The Hong Kong stall at Australiaâs largest Asian festival in Adelaide was not expecting rain when its performances kicked off last week.
Its team of five had planned an interactive game that would take spectators through Hong Kongâs food and cultural scene, then through a century of transformation from a fishing village to an international financial hub.
The Hong Kong Cultural Association of South Australia, seen in a performance earlier this year. They wanted to use umbrellas as one of their props for a workshop at the OzAsia festival in Adelaide.
âAnd lastly, we told them we will have a yellow umbrella as decoration because it has always been our signature,â said Leung.
Thatâs when the trouble started.
The organisers of the OzAsia Festival, which is sponsored by the Hong Kong governmentâs economic and cultural office in Sydney and the Australian Department of Infrastructure and Communications, suspected these werenât ordinary umbrellas.
âWith regards to the yellow umbrellas, we found this online,â said one festival official in an email that linked to the Wikipedia page of the 2014 Hong Kong pro-democracy umbrella movement.
âUnfortunately we are unable to approve the use of the yellow umbrellas as props or decor.â
The Hong Kong group, which had been rehearsing for months, reluctantly agreed to remove the umbrellas. It just wanted the chance to perform. Then they were told that unfortunately, the festival could not supply them with audio equipment. Undeterred, the performers said they would bring their own.
On September 29, the festival said all the performances scheduled to take place in the Lucky Dumpling Market had been cancelled due to COVID restrictions (South Australia recorded 0 cases that day).
But when Leung picked up a pamphlet for the festival two weeks later she found that there was space for performances from other groups including at least five from mainland Chinese associations.
An OzAsia spokeswoman said any performances or workshops from other groups had already been scheduled in the initial planning.
âThere were no available slots to reschedule the Hong Kong Cultural Association of South Australia,â she said.
One official said to Leung if the âChinese group or other people are not happy with your yellow umbrella display, we will be in troubleâ.
Leung said the group âjust wanted to be part of the communityâ.
Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam. Credit:AP
âWe live in Australia, which is a democratic and free country, and we have freedom of speech and freedom of expression. This was a cultural event, not political propaganda. We worry about political censorship, and also we worry about foreign interference. We really want to get an answer.â
The group has written to Communications Minister Paul Fletcher whose department sponsors a section of the festival seeking just that. He has yet to respond. The Department of Foreign Affairs was contacted for comment.
OzAsia said the workshop was cancelled because they needed more staff for extra COVID cleaning measures. A spokeswoman said that the Moon Lantern Trail and Lucky Dumpling Market were inclusive community and family events, âand as such, activities with political or religious content are not scheduledâ.
The initial incident, first reported by SBS Cantonese and independently verified by The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age, is not an isolated one. Another Hong Kong market stall selling crafts at Brisbane Riverside Markets has been moved away from the main thoroughfare after almost 10 months.
Peter Hackworth, who runs some of Brisbaneâs most popular markets, said the stall was moved because of space constraints. âAs we are short on space at Riverside in the Garden Market, we do not take political or charities in the main area of the market,â she said.
The Hong Kong stall at Brisbaneâs Riverside Markets.
But the organisers of the Brisbane stall which sells trinkets and t-shirts have a different version of events.
âPro-Beijing people were coming to our stall, shouting and arguing with us and then complaining to the organiser of the market,â said Hong Kong stall host Jacob, who asked only to be referred to by his first name because of concerns for the safety of his family in Hong Kong.
Jacob and others associated with the stalls are so concerned about the national security laws imposed by Beijing on Hong Kong that they are afraid to speak on the record about umbrellas being displayed in Adelaide or t-shirts being sold in Brisbane.
The national security laws are extraterritorial, which means they apply to any activity around the world that could be interpreted as dissent. They are so broad that the Adelaide umbrellas could be seen as a threat to the Chinese state, putting the families of those involved in the stalls in danger.
The market incidents are minor compared to the censorship and political purges underway in Hong Kong but the impact on freedom of expression almost 6000 kilometres away in Australia shows how insidious the laws have become.
In Hong Kong, civil society is reeling from the withdrawal of human rights group Amnesty International from the territory over staff safety fears. A dozen unions and civil rights groups have disbanded after the laws were implemented to end to more than 18 months of protest in the former British colony.
Anjhula Mya Singh Bais, chair of Amnestyâs International Board, said the decision to shut down its operations in Hong Kong had been âdriven by Hong Kongâs national security lawâ.
âThe recent targeting of local human rights and trade union groups signals an intensification of the authoritiesâ campaign to rid the city of all dissenting voices,â she said. âIt is increasingly difficult for us to keep operating in such an unstable environment.â
Even shutting down is now seen as an act of defiance. Pro-Beijing lawmaker Holden Chow Ho-ding accused Amnesty of âsmearing the national security lawâ by daring to leave the city.
Hong Kongâs Chief Executive Carrie Lam said no organisation should be worried about their âlegitimate operations in Hong Kongâ.
â[But] if there are individuals and organisations that have been using Hong Kong to spread news or engage in activities [that] are undermining national security, then, of course, they would need to be worried.â
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