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Home / World

Hong Kong protesters adapt signs, slogans to skirt new law

By Zen Soo, Phoebe Lai
Other·
21 Jul, 2020 02:20 AM6 mins to read

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A Hong Kong cafe, known as a "yellow shop" because its owners expressed sympathy for protesters, has a wall of blank post-it notes. Photo / AP

A Hong Kong cafe, known as a "yellow shop" because its owners expressed sympathy for protesters, has a wall of blank post-it notes. Photo / AP

It was one of the first protests in Hong Kong after a feared national security law came into effect.

Among a dozen or so lunchtime demonstrators at a luxury shopping centre in the Central business district, a man raised a poster that — viewed from afar — read in Chinese, "Liberate Hong Kong, revolution of our times."

The Government had just banned the slogan, saying it had separatist connotations and so ran afoul of the new security law's prohibition of secessionist acts.

Shortly afterwards, riot police entered the mall, shooing away onlookers. They detained the man, telling him the slogan was banned. But when officers looked at the poster up close, no words could be made out. It merely had circular shapes against a contrasting background. They snapped a few photographs of the poster and let him go.

The U.K. has changed its extradition treaty with Hong Kong, but to be clear, Boris Johnson is "not going to be pushed into a position of becoming a knee-jerk Sinophobe on every issue, somebody who is automatically anti-China.″https://t.co/I8mRK695in

— Jonathan Cheng (@JChengWSJ) July 21, 2020
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Since the imposition of the security law – which bans secessionist, subversive and terrorist activities, as well as collusion with foreign forces, with penalties of up to life imprisonment – anti-government protesters in Hong Kong, and those supporting the movement, have adapted their methods to try to make their voices heard without violating the legislation.

Before the law took effect on June 30, protesters often held up colourful posters plastered with slogans that ranged from condemning the Chinese Government to calling for Hong Kong's independence. Since then, they have become creative in obscuring their messages.

Many of the protesters at the shopping centre held up blank pieces of white paper to protest against China's "white terror" of political repression. Other posters are designed to circumvent bans on slogans. The Government has not yet made it clear if such forms of expression are illegal.

Nathan Law, a pro-democracy activist from Hong Kong, has begun a new life in exile. He said that a lot of activists were "under grave danger" under Hong Kong's new security law. pic.twitter.com/2wGu4C3x88

— DW News (@dwnews) July 20, 2020

The law has had a chilling effect on "yellow shops" that support the protest movement. Many have removed protest artwork and sticky notes bearing words of encouragement from customers, out of fear that they could land them in trouble with the authorities.

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Some shop owners, like Tan Wong, have instead put up blank sticky notes to show solidarity with the movement.

"We are doing this right now because (the shop) is private property. We are trying to tell Hong Kong people that this is the only thing that we 'yellow shops' can do," said Wong, who runs Kok Kok Chicken, a Korean fried chicken store.

"If we do not persist, we would no longer be able to deliver our message to others," he said.

Yu Yee Cafe, a Hong Kong-style diner that serves fast food, has covered its windows with blank sticky notes and even displays an origami figure of Winnie the Pooh, a playful taunt of Chinese President Xi Jinping. Chinese censors briefly banned social media searches for Winnie the Pooh in China after Xi's appearance was compared to the cartoon bear.

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"I wonder if there's still rule of law if sticking a (blank) piece of paper on the wall is illegal," said Eddie Tsui, one of the diner's customers. "It's just using a different way to express our demands. If you don't allow us to protest that way, we'll find another way."

The use of blank paper or sticky notes to protest is a changing form of resistance, according to Ma Ngok, an associate professor of politics at the Chinese University of Hong Kong.

"They put up blank notes so that even if the Government wants to prosecute them, there is nothing that can be used against them," he said.

Protesters in Hong Kong have also come up with alternative slogans to circumvent the ban on "Liberate Hong Kong, revolution of our times."

Hong Kong has won praise for how it handled the pandemic but a new outbreak has puzzled even health experts. Most people who test positive for the virus have not traveled and have not been linked to known clusters. https://t.co/kP8DNM4kS0

— New York Times World (@nytimesworld) July 20, 2020

Some users quote the initials of the romanisation of the eight Chinese characters in the banned slogan -– "GFHG, SDGM."

Others have changed the words entirely to terms that sound similar but mean very different things.

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One alternative slogan now reads "Patronise Hong Kong, Times Square," a reference to a popular shopping centre in the city.

A popular protest anthem, Glory to Hong Kong, has had some of its lyrics changed, with protesters replacing the words with numbers in Cantonese that sound approximately like the lyrics.

TONIGHT: The UK has announced it will suspend its extradition treaty with Hong Kong as a result of China's new security law - but as China and UK relations continue to worsen, where do both countries go from here?

Diplomatic Editor @MarkUrban01 reports at 22:45#Newsnight pic.twitter.com/taXcsSnSAg

— BBC Newsnight (@BBCNewsnight) July 20, 2020

The circumventing of bans on slogans is reminiscent of how mainland Chinese internet users come up with creative ways and similar-sounding words to talk about sensitive issues without triggering censorship under the "Great Firewall of China," where censors delete posts containing sensitive terms and make such keywords unsearchable on online platforms.

"There is a long history of censorship where we know that people will find ways to circumvent the system, no matter how you regulate," said Fu King-wa, associate professor at the University of Hong Kong's journalism school.

"Sometimes, censorship can backfire, triggering more people to discuss an issue because they think that if it is censored, then it must be something important," he said.

- AP

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