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Letters | Staying on in Hong Kong, with hopes of a better future for all: a father’s note

  • Others around me speak of migrating for a better future for their children. I am torn. This is the ‘barren rock’ my father and his generation transformed into a prosperous city. We have inherited this. Now we must pass it on

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“It is only with the heart that one can see rightly; what is essential is invisible to the eye.” Photo: Handout

My dear Ying-Ying,

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I write this letter with unease, having just tucked the two-year-old you into bed. Last month, Hongkongers returned to the streets to protest against the new national security law. The pro-establishment camp claims the law will restore stability. Others see it as a threat to businesses, civil liberties and our promised autonomy. Is this the death knell for “one country, two systems”?
I think of the future. You are 18 now; life in 2036 under the national security law must be rather different. Are protests legal? Do candles still light up the night of June 4? How many dissidents are in prison?
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I think of you whenever I see young protesters on TV, facing the police with determination. How much despair must they be in to fight this way, despite the threat of violent arrest and imprisonment? Have we let our young people down?

Does the same future await you – not one of kindness, peace and justice but of brutality, tear gas and hate? What can we do so your generation may march on, exercising your civic duties and freedoms without fear of violence and reprisal?

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