Sebaiknya memang ada kebebasan berpendapat. Setidaknya untuk bilang not yet.. 

--- SADAR@... wrote:
Bagaimana bisa menganggap HK bukan bagian/wilayah Tiongkok! SATU kesatuan 
NEGARA dibawah Republik Rakyat Tiongkok! Jelas, Louisa Lim ini, tidak mengakui 
HK adalah bagian/wilayah tak terpisahkan dari Tiongkok Daratan! Berkehendak HK 
Merdeka, .... dan sekarang terus merongrong, menjegal kelancaran pem..HK dengan 
segala penolakkan dan pemboikotan bahkan dengan usaha gunakan "people Power" 
aksi-aksi kerusuhan/kekerasan melumpuhkan dan menggulingkan pemerintah HK!


ajeg 於 17/6/2019 23:23 寫道:
 Hong Kong is not China yet, but that feared day is coming ever nearer
  Louisa Lim
   Mon 17 Jun 2019 01.19 BST  
The extradition law was delayed after a million people took to the streets, but 
the fight for the territory’s values is far from over
  
  Hong Kong has become a place whose present is unresolved and whose future is 
unimaginable. After the unexpected violence of the last week, no one can 
predict how the events of this afternoon, tomorrow, this week will play out. 
The only certainty is that Hong Kong’s way of life is under immediate threat 
and its people are coming out in force to defend it. 
  But the curse of living in the eternal immediate present is that the stakes 
for this “last fight” could not be higher, especially since young Hong Kongers 
fear that if they are defeated in this battle, there will be nothing left to 
lose. The failure of the Umbrella movement five years ago, when Hong Kongers 
occupied important thoroughfares for 79 days, seeking greater democratic 
participation, to win any concrete gains has raised the stakes further still 
this time round.
  
  “HK is not China! Not yet!” These few words hastily scrawled on to a piece of 
A4 paper and tacked on to the concrete strut of a walkway aptly encapsulate the 
political crisis roiling Hong Kong. The territory has been plunged into 
instability after police fired rubber bullets and 150 rounds of teargas to 
break up a huge rally on 12 June, just days after a million people peacefully 
took to the streets to protest against extradition legislation.
  
  “Not yet” is a reference to the terms of the joint declaration governing Hong 
Kong’s return to Chinese rule in 1997, which promised that the territory’s way 
of life would remain unchanged for 50 years, until 2047. When it was signed, in 
1984, the year 2047 seemed impossibly far off, but the proposed extradition law 
brings 2047 much, much closer.
  
  By permitting the rendition of anyone on Hong Kong soil to face trial in 
China, it would effectively remove the firewall between Hong Kong’s common law 
system and the mainland’s party-dominated legal system. Though the government 
has now suspended the bill, the process has unleashed a firestorm of fear and 
anger.
  
  Since the Umbrella movement, Hong Kongers have already seen irrevocable 
changes to their way of life: popularly elected lawmakers have been 
disqualified by the courts for saying their oaths too slowly or with the wrong 
intonation; politicians have been forbidden to stand for election; a political 
party has been banned; activists have been sent to prison on public-order 
offences; now the police have used violence against their own people.
  
  The unseemly rush to pass this unpopular extradition law has also weakened 
each of the territory’s institutions. The legislature descended into unseemly 
brawls, with fist fights breaking out as committees duelled. The civil service 
and judiciary are no longer seen as politically neutral. The police force, once 
seen as Asia’s finest, is an object of popular hatred, and its relationship 
with the public is irretrievably damaged.
  
  The chief executive, Carrie Lam, is so unpopular that protesters carried 
pictures of her face stamped with the word “Liar” and 6,000 mothers turned out 
to accuse her of not being fit for office. Even though the bill has been put on 
hold, the process has already permanently devalued the institutions that HK 
people hold dear.
  
  Hong Kong’s status as a city of protest is also under threat. The ability to 
demonstrate has become an important expression of local identity that 
distinguishes Hong Kong from China and over the years Hong Kongers have 
enthusiastically marched with performative flair, mounting shopping actions, 
carol singing rallies and artistic protests against censorship with blank 
placards. Yet the designation of Wednesday’s protest as a riot, combined with 
court verdicts finding activists guilty on public nuisance charges, strike at 
the very heart of the ability to stage a protest.
  
  Today, any call to public action, even the act of giving speeches to a rally, 
requires a greater degree of caution. The young activists involved in recent 
protests have switched tactics to form leaderless, anonymous collectives, 
hiding their identities with face masks and using messaging apps to organise. 
The government has begun to act against these, arresting one Telegram group 
administrator on suspicion of conspiracy to commit public nuisance. Many 
activists no longer welcome their photos being taken or doing interviews with 
foreign media. Within the course of a week, they are becoming as cautious as 
mainland Chinese dissidents. By shutting young people out of the political 
process, the government may well have created an underground resistance that 
sees that radical action can have results.
  
  But the core values that Hong Kongers cherish include universal values, press 
freedom, judicial independence and civil rights. These are seen by Beijing as 
among the “seven unmentionables”, putting Hong Kongers on the frontline of the 
clash between western “universal” values and the Communist party’s need for 
total control.
  
  Faced with these existential threats, Hong Kong’s default position has in 
recent years been a defensive crouch. “We don’t have a grand strategy,” the 
political scientist Ray Yep from City University told me before this round of 
protests had broken out. “In every situation, you just defend what you can the 
most. This is how you defend Hong Kong values. We defend what we have. It’s 
defensive but it can be offensive as well.” When one in seven of the population 
turns out to protest against the extradition legislation, defence becomes 
attack, particularly in the eyes of Beijing.
  
  The protest messages on the pieces of paper flapping on the overhead walkway 
underline the confusion, shock and anger reverberating through the territory in 
the wake of last week’s violence. “Stop shooting students.” “Is protesting a 
crime?” “Is speaking a crime?”
  
  But equally, there’s a flinty determination that underpins the realisation 
that, even if this struggle over the extradition law is won, there will be the 
next fight, then the next. Because Hong Kong is not China yet.. Not yet, but 
2047 moves ever closer at an accelerating pace. One message simply said: “Keep 
going till the end.”
  
  Louisa Lim is the author of The People’s Republic of Amnesia 
  

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