Monday, September 29, 2014

Hong Kong: Will There Be a Crackdown?

The Situation

Protesters fill the streets on September 29.
Photo: Reuters/Tyrone Siu.
Enormous pro-democracy protests have wracked Hong Kong for days. Despite resorting to tear gas early Monday morning, the police have been ineffective in dispersing the protesters. The situation is escalating, and neither side is backing down. Worryingly, the LA Times has reported that the Hong Kong Garrison, the local military unit has been put on “high alert.”

The growing protest movement – called “Occupy Central with Love and Peace” in reference to Hong Kong’s business district, or the “Umbrella Revolution” for the umbrellas protesters have used to protect themselves from pepper spray – is calling for the right of the people of Hong Kong to nominate their own candidates in the 2017 Chief Executive election. On August 31 this year, the Chinese government announced that all candidates in that election will have to be approved by a state-appointed committee. That was a mistake. Beijing underestimated the pro-democracy activists’ depth of feeling. People in Hong Kong have repeatedly voiced their opposition to measures they see as oppressive, and Beijing has failed to take that sensitivity into sufficient account. Efforts to assimilate Hong Kong have only driven Hongkongers towards greater independence from the mainland – as of June this year, only a minority of the population of Hong Kong identify themselves as Chinese. The pro-democracy activists have stuck to their one demand, and it may be too late for Beijing to compromise. A crackdown may be on the way.


The Garrison

The People’s Liberation Army (PLA) Hong Kong Garrison – one of China’s highest-profile military units – is a 6,000-strong force with some of the PLA’s newest equipment. But it’s not armed to repel an invasion – its purpose is to put down an uprising in Hong Kong itself. The garrison’s ground force is largely light infantry with helicopters and wheeled personnel carriers – none of which seem to have the anti-tank weapons that would be necessary in a war – and it includes a naval unit with landing ships. The landing ships and helicopters may be intended to make it possible to move troops across Victoria Harbor (the channel between Hong Kong Island and the mainland) if the tunnels that run underneath it are blocked.

The idea that they’re intended to suppress an uprising isn’t speculation on my part. In 2012, units from the Hong Kong Garrison practiced operation against enemies imagined to be Cantonese-speaking in a simulated urban area (most of Hong Kong’s population speaks Cantonese, rather than Mandarin). They’ve also conducted armed naval exercises in Victoria Harbor – as opposed to the naval approaches to the city. It’s unambiguously clear where they’re expecting trouble to come from: the city itself. Because of this, the Hong Kong public doesn’t trust the garrison. Public sightings of PLA vehicles are frequently interpreted as attempts at intimidation.

The garrison has also had a recent change of leadership, suggesting that Beijing has asserted control in the face of possible widespread insubordination. If Beijing orders the garrison to put down the protests with force, they will probably follow their orders.

The Risks

No one wants another Tiananmen. A violent crackdown would seriously damage the Chinese government’s reputation both internally and internationally. Crushing hope for reform with bullets would also be guaranteed to worsen the unrest in Xinjiang, threatening China’s unity.

But the list of possible peaceful outcomes is getting shorter and shorter. The protesters aren’t going home – if anything, it seems that their numbers are growing. What was once a student protest is increasingly a representative cross-section of Hong Kong society. On the other side, Beijing can’t back down without legitimizing public involvement in politics – which it considers intolerable. With every day the protests continue, a violent crackdown becomes more likely.

A Note on Taiwan

It’s hard to predict what the exact consequences of such a crackdown would be. The “Umbrella Revolution” has had sympathy demonstrations in Taipei, the capital of Taiwan. A bloody crackdown risks pushing Taiwan closer to declaring independence – the one act sure to cause a Chinese invasion, which would likely lead to thousands of deaths. Like Hongkongers, the Taiwanese have increasingly affirmed an independent identity – but only a small minority of the Taiwanese population are in favor of formal independence at this point. Most support the status quo – de facto, but undeclared, independence. This does makes an invasion-triggering declaration unlikely – but violence in Hong Kong could still increase the pressure in that direction.


1 comment:

  1. This is nice informative blog in which you discuss about pro democracy and protest in Hong Kong and the scene after it. Thanks for sharing this and keep sharing.

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