Hong Kong

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Place.png Hong Kong  Rdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
China Hong Kong 4 levels localisation.svg
Subpage(s)Hong Kong/Governor
Special administrative region of China, several recent attempts at regime changes.

Hong Kong is an island territory off the cost of China that was a colony of the British Empire from 1842 controlled by the UK until returned to China in 1997. As a special administrative region, Hong Kong maintains separate governing and economic systems from that of mainland China under a principle of "one country, two systems".

History

Britain occupied the island of Hong Kong on 25 January 1841 during the First Opium War. China was defeated and was forced to cede Hong Kong in the Treaty of Nanking signed on 29 August 1842. The island, population 6,000, became a Crown Colony of the British Empire.

In the deacades after World War I, Hong Kong's population boomed, from 530,000 in 1916 to 725,000 in 1925, because of the crisis in mainland China. The communist revolution in China in 1949 led to another population boom in Hong Kong. Thousands of refugees emigrated from mainland China to Hong Kong, and made it an important entrepôt until the United Nations ordered a trade embargo on mainland China due to the Korean War.

The 1960s is considered a turning point for Hong Kong's economy, continuing the development and expansion of manufacturing that began in the previous decade. The economic progress made in the period would categorise Hong Kong as one of Four Asian Tigers along with Singapore, South Korea, and Taiwan.

On 19 December 1984, British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and Chinese Premier Zhao Ziyang signed the Sino-British Joint Declaration, in which Britain agreed to return Hong Kong in 1997. The last decades before Britain withdrew, it presumably created a network of stay-behind operatives that could interfere politically and in other matters.

2014 Umbrella Revolution

The Umbrella Movement (sometimes called Occupy Central) was a colour revolution movement that emerged during the Hong Kong democracy protests of 2014. Its name arose from the use of umbrellas as a symbol for resistance to the Hong Kong police's use of pepper spray to disperse the crowd during a 79-day occupation of the city demanding more transparent elections, which was sparked by the decision of the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress (NPCSC) of 31 August 2014 that prescribed a selective pre-screening of candidates for the 2017 election of Hong Kong's chief executive.

The movement received funding, logistics and PR support from the National Endowment for Democracy (NED) and its subsidiary the National Democratic Institute; the word "National" in both cases referring to the USA, the government of which, together with many large Western Corporate sponsors, provide the bulk of their funding. [1]

Benny Tai, a lecturer of law at the University of Hong Kong, was cited by various sources across the Western media as the primary organizer. Tai regularly attends US State Department, National Endowment for Democracy (NED) and its subsidiary the National Democratic Institute (NDI) funded and/or organized forums. He is also active at the University of Hong Kong's Centre for Comparative and Public Law (CCPL) - also funded by NDI.[2]

Joshua Wong was a prominent figure during the "Umbrella Revolution," and in 2016 he was invited to Washington DC by National Endowment for Democracy subsidiary - Freedom House - to collect an award for his role in leading the unrest.[3]

The National Democratic Institute (NDI) maintains a close relationship with Demosistō, the political party Wong founded in 2016 with fellow Umbrella movement alumnus Nathan Law.[4]

Just days after Trump’s election as president in November 2016, Wong was back in Washington to appeal for more US support. “Being a businessman, I hope Donald Trump could know the dynamics in Hong Kong and know that to maintain the business sector benefits in Hong Kong, it’s necessary to fully support human rights in Hong Kong to maintain the judicial independence and the rule of law,”

2019 Protests

Chinese Pepe The Frog protestor in Hong Kong 2019.jpg

The 2019–2020 Hong Kong protests, also known as the Anti-Extradition Law Amendment Bill Movement, were a series of protests in Hong Kong in response to the introduction of the Fugitive Offenders amendment bill by the Hong Kong government. The bill would have allowed extradition to jurisdictions with which Hong Kong did not have extradition agreements, including mainland China and Taiwan.

The Hong Kong Human Rights Monitor, a key member of the coalition that organized against the extradition law, received more than $2 million in NED funds since 1995.[5] Platforms like Google, Twitter, and Facebook deleted accounts attempting to expose the West's role in backing unrest in Hong Kong.

After the extradition law was scrapped, the protests moved into a more aggressive phase, launching “hit and run attacks” against government targets, erecting roadblocks, besieging police stations, and generally using the tactics from other US-backed regime-change operations from Ukraine to Venezuela to Nicaragua. [6], throwing molotov cocktails into intersections to block traffic[7]; attacked vehicles[8] and their drivers[9] for attempting to break through roadblocks; beaten opponents with truncheons[10]; attacked a wounded man with a US flag[11]; menaced a reporter into deleting her photos[12]; kidnapped and beat a journalist senseless[13]; beat a mainland traveler unconscious[14] and prevented paramedics from reaching the victim; and hurled petrol bombs at police officers[15].

'Kong Tsung-gan'

Full article: 'Kong Tsung-gan'

'Kong Tsung-gan' was an alleged prominent Hong Kong pundit and organizer of anti-China activities, who Western corporate media used as a go-to source for quotes. In August 2020, it was revealed the Twitter activist was in fact Brian Patrick Kern, a US citizen pretending to be native grassroots activist, used to create an 'internal' demand for harsh sanctions on Hong Kong and China.


 

Related Quotation

PageQuoteAuthorDate
Document:US Openly Approves Hong Kong Chaos it Created“The White House is watching democracy protests in Hong Kong closely and supports the "aspirations of the Hong Kong people”Josh Earnest29 September 2014

 

Events

EventDescription
Operation YellowbirdA UK/US operation to extract Chinese leadership of the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989.
The Future of Hong KongThe Henry Jackson Society society strategizing on how to support their preferred people in Hong Kong

 

Groups Headquartered Here

GroupStartDescription
Jardine Matheson1832Conglomeration based on "the world's most valuable single commodity trade of the nineteenth century", opium.
Occupy Central27 March 2013A civil disobedience movement which first manifested on the streets of Hong Kong's financial district on September 28, 2014. Plenty of support from National Endowment for Democracy.

 

Jobs here

EventJobAppointedEndDescription
Peer de SilvaHong Kong Chief of Station19621963
Chad SweetInvestment advisor19942005Possibly as CIA Business cover

 

Citizens of Hong Kong on Wikispooks

TitleBornDescription
Kelly Chen13 September 1972Hong Kong singer, WEF/Young Global Leaders 2009
Rosanna Wong15 August 1952Hong Kong politician, WEF/Global Leaders for Tomorrow 1993

 

Related Documents

TitleTypePublication dateAuthor(s)Description
Document:Hong Kong's Identity Crisisarticle9 October 2014Ulson GunnarThe "Occupy Central" movement in Hong Kong seek to harness popular disaffection, especially among the young, but its leaders represent colonial collaborators who cannot accept the return of Hong Kong to China, nor imagine life other than as cogs in an Anglo-American world order.
Document:US Openly Approves Hong Kong Chaos it Createdarticle30 September 2014'Tony Cartalucci'There is more to "Occupy Central" and the September 2014 demonstrations in Hong Kong than western media reports of "popular protests for democracy". The movement is thoroughly compromised by its links to and funding by US State Department and other Western NGO's
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References