Article 23: Joint Statement by 145 organisations worldwide in condemnation of Hong Kong and China’s officials for undermining the rule of law in Hong Kong

Led by Hong Kong Democracy Council, an important joint statement was released on 22nd March, signed by 145 Hong Kong community groups, advocacy organisations, and civil society partners worldwide, to oppose Article 23, which is set to be enforced in Hong Kong on Saturday, 23rd March 2024 following an expedited passage. The Global Alliance for Tibet & Persecuted Minorities are proud to join Hong Kong Democracy Council and its coalition in the condemnation of Hong Kong and China’s officials, who are responsible for undermining the rule of law in Hong Kong.

Joint Statement to Oppose Article 23

We, the undersigned organizations, firmly oppose the passage of the Safeguarding National Security Bill, commonly referred to as “Article 23,” set to be enforced in Hong Kong this Saturday, March 23. We condemn the Hong Kong S.A.R. government’s plan to dismantle Hong Kong’s autonomy under the guise of “national security,” which further exacerbates the existing crackdown on human rights. 

Article 23’s vague and broad definitions of crimes adversely impact not only individuals facing political arrests and prosecutions, but also everyone else in Hong Kong. The law opens the door to further arbitrary arrests and detentions while escalating censorship, creating a global chilling effect. 

Article 23 is designed to impact an unprecedentedly wide range of people. The law, for example, defines the crime of “espionage” as applicable to those who, “with intent to endanger national security,” obtain, collect, or possess information that is “directly or indirectly useful to an external force” (clause 41). It also broadly criminalizes acts with “seditious intention,” which includes an intention to bring anyone in Hong Kong “into hatred, contempt or disaffection” against the Chinese and Hong Kong governments, institutions or constitutional order. With such low thresholds for prosecutions, Article 23 could provide a pretext for even more politically-motivated prosecutions and convictions. 

Article 23 exacerbates the persecution of political prisoners and compounds the existing human-rights violations under the National Security Law (N.S.L.). The new legislation reinforces a separate judicial process for political cases, which involves appointed national security police officers in addition to handpicked prosecutors and judges, and deprives suspects of important procedural protections that were once available under Hong Kong’s legal system. Political prisoners charged under the N.S.L. have already been routinely denied bail, subjected to months of pre-trial detention, and deprived of the right to a jury trial. The new law further undermines these procedural rights by allowing the police to not only extend the period of detention without charge from the current 48 hours to a further 14 days, but also limit suspects’ access to counsel. 

In addition to those facing political persecution, international businesses and Hong Kongers not directly involved in politics will also feel the impact of Article 23, as the law intensifies existing censorship. Following the N.S.L., the Hong Kong government forced major media outlets, such as Stand News and Apple Daily, to shut down. With the passage of Article 23, investigative journalism and reporting on “sensitive” political issues – given the broad definitions of “state secrets” and “sedition” – become even riskier. Article 23’s chilling effect on the freedom of expression extends to the Hong Kong diaspora globally, as the new law applies to Hong Kong residents anywhere in the world. The law’s extraterritorial implications will undoubtedly set the stage for heightened transnational repression. 

The S.A.R. government expedited the passage of Article 23 despite mounting international pressure to uphold human rights. The U.N. Human Rights Committee issued a list of recommendations in 2022, urging the S.A.R. government to prioritize human rights. During the Universal Periodic Review on China in January this year, eight U.N. member states also called on the People’s Republic of China to repeal or review the N.S.L. Despite these clear and urgent appeals, the S.A.R. government opted to expedite the passage of Article 23 – clearing all legislative hurdles within 50 days of the initial public consultation. 

We call on governments around the world and the international community to: 

  1. Impose sanctions on Hong Kong and Chinese officials responsible for undermining the rule of law in Hong Kong, particularly those involved in the passage of the two pieces of “national security” legislation; 
  2. Review the status of the Hong Kong Economic and Trade Offices globally, with an eye towards shuttering their operations; 
  3. Offer asylum and other humanitarian pathways and provide temporary travel documents to Hong Kong human-rights defenders, especially those who have been labeled by S.A.R. authorities as “absconders” and are likely to face passport cancellation in the near future. 

Signatories: 

1. 29 Principles 

2. AfricaHongKongFrance (AHKF) 

3. Arizona for Hong Kong 

4. ARTICLE 19 

5. Asian Lawyers Network (ALN) 

6. Assembly of Citizens’ Representatives, Hong Kong 

7. Association of Cosmopolitan Culture Action Taichung 

8. Association of Hong Kongers in Western Australia 

9. Athenai Institue 10. Aus-Hong Kong Connex Inc 

11. Australia Capital Hong Kong Association 

12. Australia Hong Kong Link 

13. Australia Tibet Council 

14. Australian and New Zealand Alliance for Victims of the Chinese Communist Regime

15. Bay Area Friends of Tibet 

16. Befria Hongkong (Sweden) 

17. Birmingham HongKongers 

18. Blossom Community HK CIC 

19. Bonham Tree Aid CIC 

20. Bristol Hongkongers 

21. Britons in Hong Kong 

22. Campaign For Uyghurs 

23. Canada-Hong Kong Link 

24. Center For Uyghur Studies 

25. Chicago Solidarity with Hong Kong (CSHK) 

26. Chinese Human Rights Defenders (CHRD) 

27. Coalition of Students Resisting China 

28. Committee For Freedom in Hong Kong Foundation 

29. Committee to Protect Journalists 

30. Czechs Support Tibet 

31. Democracy for Hong Kong (D4HK) 

32. Dialogue China 

33. European Belarus Foundation 

34. European Values Center for Security Policy 

35. Fight for Freedom. Stand with Hong Kong. 

36. Finnish Hongkongers 

37. Flow HK 

38. Formosan Association for Human Rights 

39. Frankfurt Stands With Hong Kong 

40. Free Tibet 

41. Free Uyghur Now 

42. Freedom House 

43. Freiheit für Hongkong e.V. (FfHK) 

44. Friends of Hong Kong (Calgary) 

45. Fundacíon Para la Libertad de Nicaragua 

46. Germany Stands with Hong Kong 

47. Global Alliance for Tibet & Persecuted Minorities 

48. Grupo de Apoio ao Tibete – Portugal 

49. HKersUnited 

50. Hong Kong Aid 

51. Hong Kong Affairs Association of Berkeley 

52. Hong Kong Committee in Norway 

53. Hong Kong Democracy Council 

54. Hongkonger Community Center (HKCC Brisbane) 

55. Hongkonger in Deutschland e.V. 

56. Hongkongers in Britain (HKB) 

57. HongKongers in Leeds 

58. Hong Kongers in San Diego 

59. Hong Kongers in San Francisco Bay Area 

60. Hong Kong Forum, Los Angeles 

61. Hong Kong International Alliance Brisbane (HKIA Brisbane) 

62. Hong Kong Media Overseas (HKMO) 

63. Hong Kong Outlanders in Taiwan 

64. Hong Kong Scots 

65. Hong Kong Social Action Movements in Boston 

66. Hong Kong Student Advocacy Group – NYU 

67. Hong Kong Watch 

68. Human Rights in China 

69. Human Rights Network for Tibet and Taiwan (HRNTT) 

70. Humanitarian China 

71. Humanosh USA 

72. India Tibet Friendship Society NAGPUR 

73. Internationale Gesellschaft für Menschenrechte (IGFM) 

74. International Tibet Network 

75. Khmer Movement for Democracy 

76. KONGcentric 

77. Lady Liberty Hong Kong (LLHK) 

78. Lamp of Liberty 

79. Le Comité pour la Liberté à Hong-Kong 80. Liberté au Tibet (France) 

81. Lion Rock Café (New York) 

82. Manchester Stands With Hong Kong 

83. McMaster Stands With Hong Kong 

84. New School for Democracy (NSD Taiwan) 

85. New Yorkers Supporting Hong Kong (NY4HK) 

86. North America Taiwanese Professors’ Association (NATPA) 

87. Northern California Hong Kong Club 

88. North East Hongkongers Club – U.K. 

89. Norwegian Tibet Committee 90. Nottingham Stands With Hong Kong 

91. NYC852HKER 

92. Ontario Hong Kong Youth Action 

93. PMGI [Peace Media & Good Governance Institute] 

94. Power to Hongkongers 95. Reading UK Stands with HK 

96. Reporters Without Borders (RSF) 

97. Santa Barbara Friends of Tibet 

98. Scottish Hongkongers 

99. SEArious For HKG (Seattle) 

100. South Sudan Democratic Alliance (SSDA) 

101. Southampton Hongkongers 

102. Stand with HK@JPN 

103. Students for a Free Tibet International 

104. Students for a Free Tibet – Boston 

105. Students for a Free Tibet- India

106. Students for a Free Tibet – Japan 

107. Students for a Free Tibet – Middletown High School 

108. Students for a Free Tibet – Minnesota 

109. Students for a Free Tibet – New York/New Jersey 

110. Students for a Free Tibet -Toronto 

111. Students for Hong Kong 

112. Sutton Hong Kong Culture & Art Society 

113. Swedish Tibet Committee 

114. Swiss Tibetan Friendship Association 

115. Taiwan Association for Human Rights 

116. Taiwan East Turkestan Association (TETA) 

117. Taiwan Forever Association 

118. Taiwan Hong Kong Association 

119. Taiwan Labour Front 

20. Taiwan Youth Association for Transitional Justice and Kiōng-Seng 

121. Taiwanese Association In Japan 

122. Texans Supporting Hong Kong (TX4HK) 

123. Tibet Initiative Deutschland e.V. 

124. Tibet Justice Center 

125. Tibet Solidarity 

126. Tibet Support Group Ireland 

127. Tibet Support Committee, Denmark 

128. Tibetan Youth Association in Europe (TYAE) 

129. Uniting HongKongers (Australia) 

130. Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organisation (UNPO) 

131. US Hongkongers Club 

132. Uyghur Academy International 

133. Uyghur American Association 

134. Uyghur Center for Human Rights and Democracy 

135. Uyghur Human Rights Project 

136. Vancouver Activists of Hong Kong (VAHK) 

137. Vancouver Hong Kong Forum Society 

138. Vancouver Society in Support of Democratic Movement (VSSDM) 

139. Victoria Hongkongers Association (Australia) 

140. Washingtonians Supporting Hong Kong (DC4HK) 

141. We The Hongkongers 

142. Winnipeg Hong Kong Concern 

143. World Federation of Taiwanese Associations 

144. World Liberty Congress 

145. World Uyghur Congress

USEFUL LINKS

Link to the original Joint Statement published on Hong Kong Democracy Council’s website.

Hong Kong Democracy Council

Article 23

Author: Tsering Passang (Tsamtruk)

Founder and Chair, Global Alliance for Tibet & Persecuted Minorities (GATPM)

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