Hong Kong jails lady for insulting China’s nationwide anthem throughout Olympic celebration

Hong Kong jails lady for insulting China’s nationwide anthem throughout Olympic celebration



Hong Kong
CNN
 — 

A lady who waved a British colonial-era flag to have a good time Hong Kong claiming Olympic gold has change into the primary individual within the metropolis to be jailed on a cost of insulting the Chinese nationwide anthem.

Paula Leung, a 42-year-old on-line journalist, admitted the cost and was given a three-month jail sentence on Thursday, Hong Kong’s public broadcaster RTHK reported.

Leung, who stated in mitigation that she had autism and studying difficulties, had waved the flag in a shopping center the place an enormous display was displaying the medal ceremony following Edgar Cheung’s victory within the foil on the Tokyo Olympics in July 2021.

Large crowds had gathered to have a good time what was Hong Kong’s second ever Olympic gold medal and its first in fencing, however the scene turned rowdy when the Chinese nationwide anthem was performed for the award ceremony and a few individuals started booing.

Hong Kong, a former British colony, continues to characterize itself individually to mainland China on the Olympics regardless of having handed over to Chinese sovereignty in 1997.

Cheung’s win was seen by many as a breakthrough for Hong Kong’s athletes and a uncommon second of unity in a metropolis that has been rocked lately by anti-government protests.

But using the Chinese nationwide anthem – “March of the Volunteers” – to mark his victory was controversial because it was the primary time the anthem had been used at an Olympics medal ceremony for a Hong Kong athlete. When windsurfer Lee Lai-shan took Hong Kong’s solely different gold, on the 1996 Atlanta Olympics, “God Save The Queen” was performed and the British colonial flag of Hong Kong was raised.

Pro-democracy protesters within the metropolis have often used symbols from the British colonial period to mark defiance towards mainland China’s more and more tight grip on the semi-autonomous metropolis.

Protesters usually waved the colonial period flag on the pro-democracy demonstrations that befell throughout town in 2019, whereas among the hundreds of Hong Kongers who lined up outdoors the British consulate to pay their respects to Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II following her dying in September noticed their actions as a delicate type of protest.

Public gatherings have been uncommon since China imposed a nationwide safety regulation in June 2020 to extinguish the more and more forceful pro-democracy protests.

That similar month, Hong Kong’s native authorities introduced in laws that made insulting the Chinese nationwide anthem an offence punishable by as much as three years in jail and a most positive of $6,400 (HK$50,000).

The laws requires individuals to “stand solemnly and deport themselves with dignity” when “March of the Volunteers” is performed or sung.

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