Berliner Boersenzeitung - Pandas and Trump teach Hong Kong kids about national security crimes

EUR -
AED 4.234388
AFN 72.639376
ALL 96.011315
AMD 433.39967
ANG 2.063966
AOA 1057.301233
ARS 1609.805313
AUD 1.62247
AWG 2.0754
AZN 1.940597
BAM 1.953961
BBD 2.315661
BDT 141.069083
BGN 1.970833
BHD 0.435613
BIF 3413.661617
BMD 1.153
BND 1.469149
BOB 7.944662
BRL 5.987513
BSD 1.149738
BTN 106.172928
BWP 15.624568
BYN 3.448515
BYR 22598.799575
BZD 2.312264
CAD 1.579426
CDF 2611.544593
CHF 0.906777
CLF 0.026482
CLP 1045.666943
CNY 7.940538
CNH 7.925027
COP 4266.07686
CRC 538.904553
CUC 1.153
CUP 30.554499
CVE 110.163243
CZK 24.43234
DJF 204.730891
DKK 7.471889
DOP 70.175483
DZD 152.323995
EGP 60.280107
ERN 17.295
ETB 179.488186
FJD 2.545881
FKP 0.864114
GBP 0.863885
GEL 3.124702
GGP 0.864114
GHS 12.526429
GIP 0.864114
GMD 84.74113
GNF 10075.736774
GTQ 8.806865
GYD 240.537816
HKD 9.038067
HNL 30.430024
HRK 7.536472
HTG 150.81135
HUF 387.957396
IDR 19549.114633
ILS 3.556613
IMP 0.864114
INR 106.632955
IQD 1506.095763
IRR 1515041.971732
ISK 143.583084
JEP 0.864114
JMD 180.863721
JOD 0.817461
JPY 183.356399
KES 149.279234
KGS 100.829866
KHR 4613.758297
KMF 492.330847
KPW 1037.675076
KRW 1715.906425
KWD 0.353532
KYD 0.958107
KZT 553.973492
LAK 24671.99659
LBP 102955.700213
LKR 358.026187
LRD 210.395658
LSL 19.233667
LTL 3.404509
LVL 0.697439
LYD 7.360201
MAD 10.781241
MDL 20.056474
MGA 4786.495705
MKD 61.582582
MMK 2421.419221
MNT 4117.480227
MOP 9.280048
MRU 45.734953
MUR 53.625825
MVR 17.813637
MWK 1993.52401
MXN 20.307593
MYR 4.512267
MZN 73.688038
NAD 19.233667
NGN 1561.55408
NIO 42.311101
NOK 11.057616
NPR 169.877821
NZD 1.967928
OMR 0.443342
PAB 1.149653
PEN 3.929653
PGK 4.96044
PHP 68.676104
PKR 320.996397
PLN 4.2612
PYG 7453.115586
QAR 4.191828
RON 5.092684
RSD 117.424906
RUB 95.932062
RWF 1681.417715
SAR 4.329541
SBD 9.276095
SCR 15.83784
SDG 692.952707
SEK 10.714045
SGD 1.472421
SHP 0.865049
SLE 28.361738
SLL 24177.845527
SOS 655.896995
SRD 43.381655
STD 23864.771654
STN 24.477496
SVC 10.059621
SYP 127.505379
SZL 19.237231
THB 37.33442
TJS 11.019921
TMT 4.04703
TND 3.389169
TOP 2.776147
TRY 50.9769
TTD 7.800727
TWD 36.713862
TZS 3002.100271
UAH 50.514064
UGX 4339.991167
USD 1.153
UYU 46.736829
UZS 13951.991593
VES 516.322799
VND 30338.31193
VUV 137.890567
WST 3.15196
XAF 655.340297
XAG 0.014494
XAU 0.000231
XCD 3.11604
XCG 2.072068
XDR 0.815033
XOF 655.351654
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.048129
ZAR 19.182034
ZMK 10378.384256
ZMW 22.425286
ZWL 371.265523
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • CMSC

    -0.0400

    22.95

    -0.17%

  • CMSD

    -0.0700

    22.88

    -0.31%

  • RYCEF

    0.6900

    16.81

    +4.1%

  • GSK

    -0.3600

    53.41

    -0.67%

  • NGG

    -0.4700

    90.42

    -0.52%

  • RELX

    -0.1800

    34.29

    -0.52%

  • BCC

    1.2000

    72.92

    +1.65%

  • BCE

    0.1100

    26.01

    +0.42%

  • RIO

    -0.0600

    89.8

    -0.07%

  • BTI

    -0.3900

    60.55

    -0.64%

  • JRI

    -0.0800

    12.46

    -0.64%

  • VOD

    0.1500

    14.75

    +1.02%

  • AZN

    -0.7200

    191.29

    -0.38%

  • BP

    0.9500

    43.85

    +2.17%

Pandas and Trump teach Hong Kong kids about national security crimes
Pandas and Trump teach Hong Kong kids about national security crimes / Photo: SU Xinqi - AFP

Pandas and Trump teach Hong Kong kids about national security crimes

Rows of fidgeting Hong Kong schoolchildren looked on as a short film explained what constitutes a national security crime, using former US President Donald Trump as an example -- and a warning.

Text size:

The TV was surrounded by dozens of stuffed panda toys, which the children were assured they could play with later if they listened attentively.

The screening was at Hong Kong's first patriotic education centre, which teaches students about the city's new national security law as well as China's history and achievements.

Beijing imposed the sweeping law on Hong Kong to snuff out dissent after huge and sometimes violent democracy protests in 2019 -- and schools have been ordered to instil a new sense of patriotism into children.

As the new academic year began on Thursday, another group of some 40 students from Pui Kiu College, known for its patriotic teaching, were among the first visitors.

"Can anyone tell me why national security matters," a retired teacher-turned-volunteer guide, who gave her surname Kan, asked the chirping crowd.

"Without national security, humankind cannot live well," a student answered.

"Well said," Kan replied. "People cannot live well, nor can the pandas."

Kan told AFP her "most important" task was helping children understand the four new offences under the security law: secession, subversion, collusion with foreign forces and terrorism.

- Trump and Lai -

During Kan's talk, Trump and the January 6, 2021 Capitol Hill riot were used to illustrate subversion -- the offence of trying to topple or undermine the government.

For foreign collusion, she used jailed Hong Kong pro-democracy media tycoon Jimmy Lai -- without naming him.

Lai and senior editors from the now-shuttered Apple Daily newspaper are facing an upcoming trial on collusion charges for allegedly lobbying for international sanctions against Hong Kong.

Then Kan turned to the moment Hong Kong's legislature was broken into by democracy protesters in 2019.

"What offence was committed by the children who looked like they were going mad in the legislative council," Kan asked.

"Terrorism," some students replied.

"They didn't set a fire or kill people," Kan said, nudging them towards the offence of subversion.

- Political conversion -

The centre is operated by the city's largest pro-Beijing teachers union in a vacated school at the foot of Lion Rock -- a mountain popularly considered a symbol of the city's can-do spirit.

Until recently, Hong Kong teachers could also join a pro-democracy union but it closed in the wake of the political crackdown.

The huge 2019 rallies came after years of growing demands for Hong Kongers to have a greater say in how their city is run.

Leaders in Beijing and Hong Kong have dismissed calls for democracy and instead portrayed the movement as a foreign-directed plot to destabilise all of China.

Hong Kong's new leader John Lee, a former security chief who helped lead that crackdown, attended the centre's inauguration ceremony in July.

"In the past, some ill-intentioned people... smeared national education for a long time," he said at the time.

"I fully believe the centre will become... a learning field that nurtures a new generation of youth who love China and Hong Kong."

Kan told AFP that she used to attend the annual vigils in Hong Kong to commemorate democracy protesters killed by Chinese troops in Tiananmen Square.

"But after I saw how violent it became on TV (in 2019), I had a big turn," she said, referring to the protests.

"I regret how late I began to love my country," she said as tears welled up in her eyes.

(S.G.Stein--BBZ)