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DEMOCRACY
Keep the faith: Religion on front lines of Hong Kong protests
By Catherine LAI, Yan ZHAO
Hong Kong (AFP) June 28, 2019

Philippines' Duterte threatens to jail critics in China row
Manila (AFP) June 28, 2019 - Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte has threatened to jail critics if they try to impeach him, as he faces accusations of defending Beijing after a boat crash in the disputed South China Sea.

Duterte enjoys firm popular backing but his setting aside of the standoff with China over the resource-rich waterway is criticized as weakness by some in the Philippines.

The issue has flared up since a Chinese fishing trawler hit and sank a Filipino boat on June 9 near Reed Bank, an area that is within Manila's territory but which is also claimed by Beijing.

After a string of small street protests, as well as criticism from opposition politicians and former officials, Duterte lashed out while talking to reporters late Thursday.

"Impeach me? I will arrest all of them. I dare you to do it," Duterte said.

"I tell these stupid people, I said I deal with reality," he added.

Critics had raised the spectre of impeachment after Duterte, responding to the sinking controversy, said he allowed Chinese fishermen in Philippine waters because "we're friends".

Opposition politicians allege that violates a provision of the Philippine constitution mandating the government to protect its marine wealth, including its exclusive economic zone, "and reserve its use and enjoyment exclusively to Filipino citizens."

Duterte enjoys sky-high public popularity in the Philippines despite international disapproval of key policy measures, like his narcotics crackdown that has killed thousands.

His allies will hold the majority in the upcoming session of the legislature, which would be the authority in impeachment proceedings against any Philippine official.

However, segments of the public and press question whether Duterte's pivot toward China has brought too little in hoped-for investment and infringed too much on the nation's sovereignty.

China claims most of the waterway, through which billions in trade passes annually, and has rejected a 2016 international tribunal ruling that its claim was without basis in law.

A 1982 United Nations treaty on the law of the sea gives coastal states like the Philippines jurisdiction in exploring and exploiting marine resources over their exclusive economic zone, including waters extending 322 kilometres (200 miles) from the shore.

Twenty-two Filipino fishermen were rescued by Vietnamese fishermen hours after the June 9 collision, in which Manila initially alleged the Chinese vessel left Filipinos dead after their boat sank.

Duterte has tried to downplay the case, calling it an "accident" and accepting Beijing's offer to conduct a joint investigation.

Held aloft above a sea of protesters marching through the heart of Hong Kong, the hand-written cardboard sign made an unusual demand: "Stop using baton or we sing Hallelujah to the Lord".

The humorous threat, which was aimed at police and quickly went viral, referenced a hymn and notorious earworm that has become the anthem for recent massive demonstrations rocking the semi-autonomous city.

But it also illustrated the prominent role Christians are playing in the movement against a proposed bill to allow extraditions to mainland China.

Most churches in Hong Kong tend to shy away from political involvement.

But the now-postponed extradition bill struck a nerve with local ministries, many of which support underground churches in China.

"Everyone is worried about crossing the red line," Elton Lo, one of a group of pastors who initiated a week of fasting and prayers in support of the movement, told AFP.

Unlike in mainland China -- where faiths are strictly monitored by the state -- Hong Kong still has religious freedom.

From the influential colonial-era Catholic and Anglican communities to evangelical mega churches, Jehovah's Witnesses handing out leaflets and Hare Krishnas parading through parks, the city is a riot of faiths.

But how long that remains the case is a source of intense nervousness.

- Sliding freedoms -

Under the handover deal signed with the British, China agreed to maintain Hong Kong's unique freedoms and judicial system until 2047.

Yet many fear Beijing has already started reneging on that deal in recent years.

The plan to allow extraditions only heightened those concerns within faith communities, who feared the long arm of China's opaque and politicised law might start crossing the border.

This was especially true for Hong Kongers helping underground faith groups on the mainland where a recent clampdown has seen churches shuttered, crosses removed and Bible sales restricted.

"The Chinese Government could say that these ministries are illegal activities sponsored by the churches of Hong Kong. (Church leaders) could be arrested," said Chan Shun-hing, an expert on religion at Hong Kong Baptist University.

Father Stephen Chan has hosted an outdoor mass near the city's parliament each Sunday since the 2014 pro-democracy Umbrella Movement protests failed to win any concessions from Beijing.

"They (Catholics) know that if Hong Kong becomes Communist China, then there will be no more (religious freedom)," he told AFP after a service last weekend.

Lo and Chan both said more church leaders and congregations were now participating in the anti-government demonstrations compared with 2014.

Even though many of the Umbrella Movement's older leaders are devout Christians, it never had an openly religious feel.

"After the Umbrella Movement, within many churches there have been discussions about what the relationship between the church and society should be, especially among young people," said Lo.

Throughout this month's protests, religious leaders organised prayer meetings and hymn sessions -- often aimed at defusing tensions between protesters and police -- as well as opening their doors to let demonstrators rest and pray.

- Conservative concern -

Christians make up some 11 percent of the population but they remain influential, especially among the elite -- pro-Beijing leader Carrie Lam is herself a devout Catholic.

But Lam has found even her natural religious allies criticise her extradition plan.

Earlier this month the pastor of a usually pro-government mega-church said he could not support the bill, while the Catholic diocese and an umbrella body of 21 churches urged Lam to withdraw the bill altogether.

Cardinal Zen, an octogenarian former Bishop of Hong Kong and staunch critic of the Vatican's recent rapprochement with Beijing, has been a regular at the protests.

"There is no choice but to protest," he told AFP.

"We don't talk much about 2047. What will happen then depends also on what we try to do today. I hope some radical change of situation will happen in China before 2047."

One pastor -- who works with youths at one of the city's most conservative churches and only gave his surname, Tam, said he did not agree with the more radical tactics used by protesters.

But he attended the protests with about a dozen young church members on June 12, and was swept up in crowds escaping tear gas and rubber bullets fired by police.

He said his church -- which counts police officers and government officials among its congregation -- held prayers calling for Lam to hold the bill, warning that attempting to push it through the legislative process would be "very dangerous."

"It would totally tear society apart and many things would cease to function."

He expected freedom of religion to worsen as 2047 approaches but he remained hopeful.

"I can only expect it to get worse, but no matter how bad it gets, as long as we can speak out we should speak."


Related Links
Democracy in the 21st century at TerraDaily.com


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DEMOCRACY
From homework to helmets, Hong Kong's protesters evolve and harden
Hong Kong (AFP) June 14, 2019
The optimism that once defined Hong Kong's pro-democracy rallies has been replaced by desperation and foreboding as young protesters flood the streets again, this time ready to fight in what feels like a last-ditch battle for the city. When police cleared protesters from the centre of Hong Kong after the two-month "Umbrella Movement" occupation in 2014 calling for the right to elect the city's leader, demonstrators hung a sign from a bridge declaring: "We will be back". This week they did just ... read more

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