Time Magazine International Edition

Caught in the middle

THE PROTESTERS DIDN’T EXPECT TO BE BACK ON THE STREETS SO SOON.

Life in Hong Kong had only just started to resemble a new normal after the threat of the pandemic subsided. But there they were again on May 24, dressed in black, ready for the storm brewing. “This is a fresh hell,” says Sukie, 25, who asked to use only her nickname for safety reasons.

After almost a year of widespread, sometimes violent pro-democracy protests in the former British colony, China had announced sweeping new security measures that will prevent and punish any secession, subversion, terrorism or foreign interference in Hong Kong. Successive city leaders refrained from passing such a law in fear of demonstrations, and so Beijing bypassed the legislature to impose the bill itself. In the rest of China, these kinds of measures are regularly leveled to stifle dissent. The intent is clear, says Willy Lam, a political analyst at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. “Control is the No. 1 consideration.”

The law, which could be enacted by late June, is

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Time Magazine International Edition

Time Magazine International Edition2 min read
Health Matters
Now would be a good time to check in on your favorite Taylor Swift fan. After months of anticipation, the superstar delivered her 11th studio album, The Tortured Poets Department, on April 19—and Swifties everywhere lost their minds. From a neuroscie
Time Magazine International Edition2 min read
The 2024 TIME100 Summit
The TIME100 community gathered in New York City on April 24 for conversations including, clockwise from bottom left, actor Elliot Page with TIME’s Sam Lansky; comedians Phoebe Robinson and Alex Edelman with TIME editor-in-chief Sam Jacobs; TIME CEO J
Time Magazine International Edition2 min read
Helping The World Live Better
In 2018, we worked with Bill Gates on a special issue of TIME dedicated to the power of optimism. Gates’ view, shared by many of the issue’s contributors, was that people are wired to focus on when things go wrong and when they don’t work. Sometimes

Related Books & Audiobooks