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As Amnesty joins groups quitting Hong Kong, NGOs worry their funding, activities may cross ‘red lines’ of national security law

  • Groups active in advocacy, fighting for human rights, contemplate ways to take care as they carry on
  • German freedom foundation, US groups among those said to have left in the wake of security law

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Amnesty International will shut its Hong Kong affairs office on October 31, while another, on regional affairs, will close by year’s end. Photo: AP

After several years as a volunteer with Amnesty International, Hongkonger Susan* was sad but not surprised by the news that the human rights organisation was quitting the city.

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“I knew it was only a matter of time,” she says.

She was a student when she first signed up as a volunteer, drawn by her passion for human rights and her admiration for the group’s work globally.

Now in her 30s and working for an international non-governmental organisation, she says a volunteer group she belongs to that advocates for minority rights is discussing whether to carry on or disband.

“The work still needs to be done,” says Susan, who spoke to the Post on condition of anonymity.

London-based Amnesty announced on Monday that it would be leaving Hong Kong after more than four decades because the national security law imposed by Beijing on the city made the group’s work on human rights “effectively impossible”.
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