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In Hong Kong the tyranny expands

Protesters demonstrate against the now-suspended extradition bill on June 16, 2019 in Hong Kong, China.
Protesters demonstrate against the now-suspended extradition bill on June 16, 2019 in Hong Kong, China. | Getty Images/Billy H.C. Kwok

According to a recent article in The Guardian, “Nearly every main voice of dissent in Hong Kong is now in jail or exile.” The latest chapter of Beijing’s grab for power saw “Hong Kong police charge 47 pro-democracy campaigners and politicians with conspiracy to commit subversion. All face life in prison if convicted.”

The protests, which began with hopes of a democratic rebuke to the autocratic regime of Xi Jinping, have seemingly come to an end, not with a bang but with a proverbial whimper. In the last year-and-a-half, as the world’s eyes turned to COVID-19 and other troubles, the Chinese government all but crushed any dissidents and all but ended democracy in Hong Kong.

For a moment, it appeared as if 2019 might be a reboot of 1989, with the tide of freedom overwhelming attempts at dictatorship. News coverage told of hundreds of thousands, even millions, of people in Hong Kong rising up against a law, pushed through by the Beijing-controlled local government, that allowed Hong Kong citizens to be prosecuted under the mainland’s jurisdiction.

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Protestors were backed and, in many cases led, by Hong Kong’s Christian population. At one point, the praise chorus “Sing Hallelujah to the Lord” became an unofficial anthem of the protests.

For months, the Communist leadership tried everything from coercion to concessions, to squash the protests, but the protests only intensified. By late summer 2019, the government withdrew the offending law, but the movement had, by then, become about much more than one law. It was now about preserving a free Hong Kong. Pro-democracy candidates all but swept Hong Kong’s local elections in November of 2019, and protestors flew British and American flags in an extra show of defiance.

But when the headlines changed from protesters to a virus and the world economy ground to a halt, other nations and their governments turned inward. The country best positioned to apply pressure, the United States, was also dealing with its greatest domestic turmoil in generations and the most contentious presidential election in recent memory.

Meanwhile, on China’s mainland, the overlords didn’t let this crisis go to waste. COVID provided all the excuse they needed to clamp down on crowds, protests, and news stories. Under new stringent national security laws, virtually any dissent to the regime’s dictates is now liable to draconian punishment. China’s promise to maintain a “one country two system” arrangement with Hong Kong was a surprisingly easy thing to discard for something enshrined in an international agreement.

Though we might be tempted to give up hope for the people of Hong Kong, many there haven’t. Hundreds continue to defy Beijing by publicly protesting the recent convictions. Though the U.S. is wavering on what to do, AustralianBritishJapanese, and European governments have decided that it can no longer be business as usual with the “People’s Republic.”

Beijing knows that as long as the West remains divided and distracted, they’re free to extinguish Uyghur culture and deny Hong Kong its liberty, but not because China is as strong as its leaders suggest. China’s economy is incredibly vulnerable and will only become more so as its population ages. Not to mention, the world is now fully aware of what it’s doing to the Uyghur population.

Given that so much Christian activity in China flows through Hong Kong, we owe it to our brothers and sisters there to pray. In a real sense, an assault on Hong Kong is part of the larger war on Chinese Christianity. We should also insist that the fate of Hong Kong becomes a foreign policy priority. There can be no “business as usual” with this regime … not from the U.S. government and not from U.S. corporations.

As we make our appeals, let’s remember how Christians have fared throughout history when challenged by godless empires. The empires are long gone. Christians aren’t.

By the way, we will honor someone who continues to speak up for China’s liberties, Pastor Bob Fu of China Aid, at the Wilberforce Weekend this May in Fort Worth, Texas. Come to wilberforceweekend.org to learn more.

Originally published at BreakPoint 

From BreakPoint. Reprinted with the permission of the Colson Center for Christian Worldview. All rights reserved. May not be reproduced or distributed without the express written permission the Colson Center for Christian Worldview. "BreakPoint®" and "The Colson Center for Christian Worldview®" are registered trademarks of The Colson Center for Christian Worldview.

John Stonestreet is the President of the Chuck Colson Center for Christian Worldview, and co-host with Eric Metaxas of Breakpoint, the Christian worldview radio program founded by the late Chuck Colson. He is co-author of A Practical Guide to Culture, A Student's Guide to Culture and Restoring All Things.

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