An unlicensed pro-democracy radio station in Hong Kong shut down on Friday after 18 years on the air. The closure of Citizens’ Radio came on the eve of the 26th anniversary of Hong Kong’s handover to China.
Since its launch in 2005, the station had hosted prominent democracy advocates, including former lawmakers Szeto Wah (司徒華), Emily Lau (劉慧卿), Albert Ho (何俊仁) and Lee Cheuk-yan (李卓人).
Its founder, “Bull” Tsang Kin-shing (曾健成), said that it was becoming increasingly difficult to invite guests following the enactment of Hong Kong’s National Security Law, which has jailed or silenced many activists.
Photo: AP
Coupled with banking problems and limited resources, Tsang said that he had no choice but to say goodbye.
“It’s hard to let go. It’s like my third son,” Tsang, 67, told reporters before he hosted his last show on Friday night.
The closure reflects the collapse of the territory’s democracy movement under the Beijing-imposed law that followed massive protests in 2019.
Photo: Reuters
After the law’s enactment three years ago, dozens of civic groups disbanded, most of the territory’s leading activists were charged with alleged national security crimes, and two vocal media outlets shut down as their top management was accused of sedition or collusion.
Large numbers of democracy supporters also left Hong Kong after finding that the promise that the former British colony would retain Western-style freedoms for 50 years after its return to Chinese rule on July 1 in 1997 was becoming increasingly threadbare.
Hong Kong yesterday marked its handover anniversary with official celebrations, but the annual massive democracy protest held for years every July 1 appears to be a thing of the past — even as daily life has largely returned to normal following years of COVID-19 restrictions.
League of Social Democrats leader Chan Po-ying (陳寶瑩) said that her party was pressured to cancel its plan to stage a small-scale protest, but that she could not give more details about it.
While Tsang’s radio station has not been directly targeted by the security law, the veteran democracy advocate said that his guests were unclear about whether their words would be in breach of the vaguely defined red lines.
He added that the station could not pay rent after next month since its bank account was recently blocked from receiving donations.
Hang Seng Bank, which handles Tsang’s account, said in a reply to a request for comment that it cannot comment on matters regarding individual accounts.
Tsang said that the recent events forced him to end his years of open defiance against the government after officials rejected his request for a broadcasting license in 2006. Over the years, Tsang continued broadcasting in “civil disobedience” even after he was convicted and fined over unlicensed broadcasting and his radio station was raided by authorities.
Tsang might try to sell his creative drawings to raise funds to continue his work in another way, but even so, things would no longer be the same, he said.
“In the future, it is very difficult to have such form of civil disobedience like this in Hong Kong,” he said.
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