HONG KONG: Hong Kongâs legislature passed a new film censorship law on Wednesday to âsafeguard national securityâ, though critics say it will dampen creativity in its world famous movie industry and further reduce freedoms in the former British colony.
China imposed a sweeping national security law over its most restive city last year, and Hong Kongâs legislature has no opposition lawmakers left after mass resignations from the pro-democracy camp in protest against the ousting of some colleagues.
The Hong Kong government said the film censorship law was aimed at content deemed to âendorse, support, glorify, encourage and incite activities that might endanger national security.â
The law empowers Hong Kongâs chief secretary, the second-most powerful figure in the cityâs administration, to revoke a filmâs licence if it is âfound to be contrary to national security interests.â
Punishment for violating the law included up to three years imprisonment and fines of up to HK$1 million ($128,400).
âThe goal is very clear: itâs to improve the film censorship system, to prevent any act endangering the national security,â Commerce Secretary Edward Yau told the Legislative Council.
Critics, however, voiced fears that the new law would harm Hong Kongâs vibrant cinema industry, whose output ranges from Bruce Leeâs innovative martial arts movies to acclaimed director Wong Kar-waiâs arthouse films.
âAdding national security clauses to the bill is clear political censorship,â said Kenny Ng, associate professor at the Academy of Film at Hong Kong Baptist University.
âItâs heavy-handed. The film industry will need time to adapt.â
Since the national security law was introduced in response mass 2019 pro-democracy protests, most opposition politicians and activists have been jailed, either under the new law or for other alleged crimes, or have fled into exile.
Scrutiny over education, arts, media and culture has intensified. Book publishers have admitted to self-censoring, cinemas have pulled a protest documentary and a university cancelled a press photography exhibition. A contemporary art museum said national security police could vet its collections. Pro-democracy tabloid Apple Daily closed in June amid a national security probe.
This year, for the first time since 1969, the Oscars were not broadcasted in Hong Kong, matching decisions in mainland China, despite an unprecedented nomination for a Hong Kong-born director.
Authorities reject the description of their actions as a âcrackdownâ on civil society and say the rights and freedoms promised to Hong Kong upon its return to Chinese rule in 1997 remain intact, but national security is a âred lineâ.
Filmmaker Kiwi Chow, whose documentary âRevolution of Our Timesâ chronicles the 2019 protests and was featured at this yearâs Cannes Film Festival, says the bill hurts the local movie industry by reducing âthe freedom to create.â
âIt will worsen self-censorship and fuel fear among filmmakers,â Chow told Reuters. â Reuters









