Future of Hong Kong: Inside Hong Kong s new Britain-based pro-democracy movement
Since the introduction of Hong Kong s draconian national security law, the city-state s pro-democracy activists have taken the fight online
8 March 2021 • 5:00am
This article is the third in our three-part series, The Future of Hong Kong, looking at how much has changed since the first protests against Beijing s extradition bill two years ago.
At 10am every morning, Simon Cheng opens his laptop and gets to work keeping the alarming decline of liberties in Hong Kong in the spotlight.
But rather than working with his fellow protesters in Hong Kong, he operates from a kitchen table in London, and his activism is fuelled by cups of Fortnum & Mason tea.
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Why Britain s anti-immigration politicians are opening the doors to thousands of Hong Kongers CNN 2/22/2021 By Tara John, CNN © Tara John/CNN Malcolm is one of hundreds of young pro-democracy protesters who have left Hong Kong.
Eighteen months ago, Malcolm was at the vanguard of Hong Kong s pro-democracy movement.
Full of bravado and often clad in black, the 21-year-old oversaw a group of 60 combative front-liners who embraced confrontational tactics against the police while demanding greater democracy in the former British colony. © AFP/Getty Images Two Royal Navy sailors carry a portrait of Queen Elizabeth through the British Forces Hong Kong headquarters as her pictures are taken down ahead of the handover of Hong Kong in 1997.