Demand is growing for Ottawa to support a Richmond man who was recently put on a wanted list by the Communist Chinese Hong Kong government.
The situation is one that observers have been predicting could happen since Hong Kong (China) implemented a new national security law in June 2020.
Victor Ho, a former editor-in-chief of the Sing Tao Daily newspaper, was accused by the Hong Kong government’s security bureau earlier this month of subverting state power after he participated in a Toronto news conference proposing a Hong Kong parliament-in-exile that would oppose Beijing’s clampdown on political freedoms. Editorial coverage of Chinese Communist Party controlled Sing Tao has shifted noticeably since the takeover;
Sing Tao now -
- Avoids or limits coverage of politically sensitive topics such as 1989 military crackdown on Tiananmen Square protesters, Tibet and Taiwanese independence.
- Shifts critical opinions to back pages.
- Chooses 'politically correct' rhetoric.
- Directs investigative journalism to favor soft news or a simple accounting of emerging events.
Sing Tao is now a Communist Party media. Two Canadian MPs and a concerned citizens group recently called on Prime Minister Trudeau and federal foreign affairs minister to step up and take note of Ho’s case and publicly denounce the Hong Kong government.
We all knew it would happen that the Chinese Communists would never honour their agreement with Britain when they took over in 1997.
We need to take Mr. Ho seriously.
Here is a remembrance of Hong Kong I posted here previously -
In
April 1975 I was in Hong Kong. It was British then and a fascinating
city for a Canadian. Full of energy and human action. Today HongKongers
feel they are a unique people who with their freedoms over a hundred
years have built something special that needs no suppression of their
dynamic spirit.
We stayed in
Tsim Sha Tsui
in Kowloon and had a nice hotel right on Nathan Road. The old Kai Tak
airport was only a narrow strip of reclaimed land that jutted from the
main waterfront into Victoria Harbour circled by high buildings. The
pilot flies over the tops and there was no glide path, so he has to
suddenly cut power and drop between those skyscrapers, but crank it on
again about half way down to get going and avoid being a splat! Then you
look out the window and the wings seem over the water because the
tarmac is so narrow. You appreciate the skill of airline pilots.
And
you soon discover the bus drivers' skill too as they race their
double-deckers on a tortuous route through the city, narrowly missing
overhanging awnings and surging crowds. Hong Kong may be British but
it's not London,
You visit Hong Kong Island via the Star Ferry. When
you want to cross from Kowloon you just run aboard and toss your money
into a huge funnel and are never sure if they actually count it.
You
might see a rare Chinese Junk passing with orange sails, or witness
people in the Causeway Bay Typhoon Shelter who live their whole lives
in little sampans. Or go to the magical Tiger Balm Gardens and buy a little vial for aches and pains. And it works!
Although
the riches of Hong Kong were evident in the fantastic array of modern
high buildings and Rolls Royces, the poor were visible too. Living in
grey tents or a lean-to on the hillside with only a piece of corrugated
tin for shelter, sometimes whole families eked out a living by making
plastic flowers or little toys and dolls. Cooking in tiny pots. Julia
Child once said the Chinese were the best cooks because they could make
their food taste the same wherever they were in the world!
While
we were there Chiang Kai-Shek died. April 5, 1975. He was the
Nationalist revolutionary and military leader of the Republic of China
from 1928 to his death in Taipei, on Taiwan island, the last stand of
the free Chinese against the Communist hordes that still rule today.
What was called Mainland China then, and wants now to eliminate
Taiwanese democracy from China. As Beijing has done with those brave
HongKongers who resisted as long as they could. Taiwan may be the last
hold of Free Chinese.
In
1975 you had to escape to Hong Kong from China. While we watched on the
news of Chiang Kai-Shek's passing, the hillsides bloomed with the red
and blue flags of the Republic lamenting the event. And it seemed that
however poor those hardy people struggling on the slopes were, they
loved their freedom more than bowing to the communist regime and needed
to show it to the world.
Says a lot about their mettle, doesn't it?
Note: In 1842 China ceded Hong Kong Island to Britain in perpetuity,
(Treaty of Nan King) followed by the Kowloon peninsula (Convention of
Peking) in 1860, also to the British in perpetuity. The lease was up only on
the New Territories in 1997. Many China watchers feel the Brits
betrayed the people of Hong Kong and considered business interests more important than the freedom of the people.
Also; Taiwan is not a parliament in exile, it is the home of FREE Chinese people who cherish liberty and is NOT part of the communist regime. And the large population of Chinese people who now reside in Western Canada are also here because they escaped the oppression of a Communist Government.
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