cross-posted from: https://scribe.disroot.org/post/8941498
Survey evidence reveals that transnational repression by Hong Kong authorities affects tens of thousands of British-based Hong Kongers beyond high-profile activists, with 66% reporting feeling at risk and 32% experiencing direct repression.
The infiltration of diaspora groups and surveillance operations have caused 42% to avoid public civic participation, fundamentally altering how the 200,000-strong community engages with UK society.
Since 2022, Hong Kong authorities [have] placed bounties totaling US$130,000 (HK$1 million) on 19 activists distributed across the United Kingdom, United States, Canada, and Australia, with an additional US$25,500 (HK$200,000) bounties on 15 more individuals. Notably, activist Chloe Cheung was only 19 years old when the bounty was issued against her. Beyond financial incentives, Hong Kong authorities have authorized the distribution of “wanted” posters and sexualized deepfake images targeting activists Carmen Lau and Tony Chung in the UK, and former Legislative Council member Ted Hui in Australia. These tactics represent a deliberate strategy to intimidate and silence dissent through public humiliation and psychological pressure.
...
Hong Kong’s transnational repression model differs strategically from the methods employed by other authoritarian regimes. While governments such as Russia, Saudi Arabia, and China have conducted high-profile assassinations and violent attacks against dissidents on UK soil, Hong Kong authorities have adopted a more subtle approach centered on infiltration, surveillance, and implicit threat-making. This strategy presents a governance challenge: the tactics are harder to detect, document, and prosecute than overt violence, yet their psychological impact on diaspora communities is profound.
...
The infiltration of approximately 40,000 community members within a single year, combined with the systematic intimidation of another 120,000-plus individuals, constitutes a coordinated foreign state operation targeting UK residents and civil society.
...