ADD ANI AS A TRUSTED SOURCE
googleads
ANI Logo
Menu
World

Places where citizens can gather, pray, discuss developments shrinking in Hong Kong

Hong Kong, May 15 (ANI): A small group on Sunday gathered near an altar at the Hong Kong Government headquarters and prayed for the activists and protesters arrested in the city. But now spaces where citizens can gather, pray and discuss developments are growing scarce in Hong Kong after China imposed the new security laws.

ANI May 15, 2022 22:53 IST googleads

Representative Images

Hong Kong, May 15 (ANI): A small group on Sunday gathered near an altar at the Hong Kong Government headquarters and prayed for the activists and protesters arrested in the city. But now spaces where citizens can gather, pray and discuss developments are growing scarce in Hong Kong after China imposed the new security laws.
The group which included Father Franco Mella sang "Sing Hallelujah to the Lord", nearly drowned out by the traffic. Father Mella (73), an Italian priest, who has been advocating human rights for five decades is unruffled by the attention and said, "If you can accept uncertainty, you won't fear."
Moments later, a woman approached the group, took video and recorded the identity numbers of several participants before leaving in a police car. "We are mentally prepared to be arrested someday," said Winnie Wong, one of the organizers.
Hong Kong's wide-ranging crackdown on all forms of social protest is being felt by its Churches and now its religious spaces are brought under the control of the state like in the rest of China, The Washington Post reported.
Earlier, on Wednesday, the Hong Kong national security police arrested 90-year-old Cardinal Joseph Zen for his involvement in the humanitarian relief fund that supported the jailed activists.
Upon his arrest, the Hong Kong government said that the arrests have "absolutely nothing to do" with religion and it was only a matter of laws that were being violated.
After the pro-democracy protests began in 2019, Beijing made the national security law in 2020, which had crushed the dissent on the island territory. Hong Kong's Churches, which used to be the space for discussing social issues, have now come under pressure.
According to 18 pastors and religious experts, Churches have been pushed into censoring themselves and also avoiding appointing the pastors which deemed to have political views, and at least one major church is restructuring itself in case the government freezes its assets, reported The Washington Post.
A study by the Hong Kong Church Renewal Movement revealed that over a third of the Churches were now adjusting the content of their preaching in light of the political situation in the city.
A pro-democracy advocate, Joshua Wong led the pro-democracy Umbrella Movement in 2014 and has said his faith strengthened his determination to fight for justice.
During the 2019 pro-democracy protests, pastors would lead their adherents in sit-ins, prayers and singing of "Hallelujah to the Lord," imploring the government to meet protesters' demands for accountability and universal suffrage.
The hymn became a symbol of peaceful protests and the freedom of assembly once allowed in the semiautonomous city that operated under the "one country, two systems" policy, which once gave it so much more freedom than the rest of China.
"Many people avoid the pitfalls on their own," said the Reverend Hung Kwok-him, a pastor who left Hong Kong for Taiwan in 2021.
Five months later, after the new security law was passed, a pro-Beijing state media outlet posted a list of 20 pastors, accusing some of them of being "riot supporters."
Afraid of being arrested, at least five outspoken pastors subsequently left for Britain and Taiwan. In April, a pastor was charged with sedition, for disrupting court proceedings and vilifying the judiciary after he commented on the ongoing trials on his YouTube channel.
Churches have always been subjected to tight control on the mainland, which many fear will be the future for Hong Kong's religious institutions.
In late 2021, the Christian and Missionary Alliance, one of Hong Kong's three largest Christian organizations, passed a motion in its annual general meeting to split its churches from one umbrella company into separate entities, according to The Washington Post citing the document.
The move was a way to prevent the whole organization from toppling if the government decides to freeze assets, according to two people familiar with the matter.
Meanwhile, Hong Kong's Evangelical Lutheran Church, in the past year issued an internal memo about qualifying only those pastors who create any problem with the government.
Hong Kong's clergy members are now rethinking ways of carrying out their preaching to balance between speaking out on social justice issues and the safety of their churches and families, as reported by The Washington Post.
"To continue to speak the truth and call out for social justice, to tell people what the Bible teaches and how the Christ taught us, shall be the greatest challenge we endeavour in this era," Pastor Shou King-kong, who has been running sermons with 10 people at a time since January last year said. (ANI)

Get the App

What to Read Next

US

"FBI personnel assisting local authorities": Kash Patel

In a post on X, Patel said, "FBI personnel are providing assistance and working with local authorities responding to the shooting at Old Dominion University. We will update as able."

Read More
Asia

PM Modi speaks to Iranian President Pezeshkian

PM Modi speaks to Iranian President Pezeshkian

"Had a conversation with Iranian President, Dr. Masoud Pezeshkian, to discuss the serious situation in the region. Expressed deep concern over the escalation of tensions and the loss of civilian lives as well as damage to civilian infrastructure," PM Modi posted on X.

Read More
Asia

India consistently supported Maldives in crisis: Mohamed Nasheed

India consistently supported Maldives in crisis: Mohamed Nasheed

He highlighted India's role as a "first responder" for the Maldives, emphasising that India's support during critical periods has been fundamental to the stability and security of the island nation.

Read More
Asia

India rushes to safeguard 9,000 nationals in Iran

India rushes to safeguard 9,000 nationals in Iran

India on Thursday highlighted a high-level diplomatic push to protect Indian interests, emphasising the twin priorities of citizen safety and the stability of energy supply chains.

Read More
Middle East

Mojtaba Khamenei calls on Muslim neighbours to clarify stance

Mojtaba Khamenei calls on Muslim neighbours to clarify stance

"The countries of the region must clarify their stance regarding the aggressors against our dear homeland and the killers of our people. I recommend that they shut down those bases as soon as possible; for they must surely have realized by now that America's claim of establishing security and peace has been nothing but a lie," he said.

Read More
Europe

ECO FAWN Society raises Pahalgam terror attack at UN Human Rights

ECO FAWN Society raises Pahalgam terror attack at UN Human Rights

At the 61st session of the United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC), Yasser Laaroussi, from the ECO FAWN Society, during General Debate under Item 3, in his oral statement, highlighted the terrorist attack that took place in Pahalgam on April 22, 2025. He urged the international community to intensify efforts to combat terrorism and ensure accountability for attacks targeting civilians

Read More
Europe

"Act of terrorism": Russia slams Mediterranean drone attack

Russian Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Maria Zakharova condemned a drone strike on the commercial vessel Arctic Metagaz in the Mediterranean. Calling it "a terrorist attack & a war crime," she detailed the crew's rescue after a gas explosion, criticised Malta's refusal to assist the injured, and denounced the European silence.

Read More
Middle East

First India-bound vessel reaches Mumbai via Strait of Hormuz

First India-bound vessel reaches Mumbai via Strait of Hormuz

The tanker reportedly switched off its Automatic Identification System (AIS) transponder while navigating the high-risk stretch of the strait.

Read More
Asia

Hardships grow as Pakistan tightens its grip in Balochistan 

Hardships grow as Pakistan tightens its grip in Balochistan 

Residents in Balochistan's Zehri and Surab regions are facing a severe humanitarian crisis due to a four-day curfew and military operations. The Baloch Yakjehti Committee reported acute food shortages, blocked healthcare access, and alleged house raids by security forces, urging international bodies to investigate these fundamental rights violations.

Read More
US

"Unjust and unlawful": Iran rejects UNSC resolution

Iran's UN envoy rejected a Security Council resolution, calling it an "unjust and unlawful" document that serves political agendas. He defended Iran's military response as a "right to self-defence" following the killing of Ayatollah Khamenei and strikes on civilian infrastructure, urging full accountability for the aggressors.

Read More
Home About Us Our Products Advertise Contact Us Terms & Condition Privacy Policy

Copyright © aninews.in | All Rights Reserved.