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Hong Kong judge rejects government request to ban pro-democracy anthem


Hong Kong court on Friday declined to the government’s request to ban the popular protest anthem “Glory to Hong Kong,” in a surprise decision that will come as a relief to global tech companies like Apple, Google and Meta that would have had to censor it — and to many citizens in the city.

As China has exerted ever greater control on Hong Kong, officials sought to ban the unofficial anthem from being shared, sung or even performed anywhere in the semiautonomous city.

The injunction would have posed significant challenges for tech companies, forcing them to stop the distribution of the song on platforms like Facebook, YouTube and iTunes, or be in violation of local law.

Local rights activists feared the ban was a given, considering China’s ever tighter grip on the territory, warning it would allow Beijing to influence freedom of information for internet users everywhere.

But High Court Judge Anthony Chan on Friday ruled that granting the injunction would have “chilling effects.”

“Innocent people might be discouraged from legitimate activities involving the song for fear of the severe consequences,” read the summary of Chan’s decision.

Ronson Chan, chairman of the Hong Kong Journalists Association, welcomed the decision, calling it “ideal” and “reasonable.” “The court is sending a strong signal that the government has to be careful when using public power, he said, noting it could evoke fear in innocent people.

Google and Meta declined to comment on the decision, and Apple did not respond to a request for comment.

Hong Kong court to rule if Google, Meta must censor unofficial anthem

Hong Kong’s city government last month asked the court to prohibit the broadcast or distribution of the song, contending it contains a slogan that advocates secession — a crime under the sweeping national security law Beijing imposed on the city in 2020 after a wave of protests.

The law significantly restricted free expression and criminalized activities seen as advocating for Hong Kong’s independence or subverting state power.

If the court had ruled in the government’s favor, it would have meant people would be outright banned from singing the lyrics or humming the melody of “Glory to Hong Kong” or sharing it in any form online.

Earlier this month, a Hong Kong man was sentenced to three months in prison under the National Anthem Ordinance, for creating a video of an athlete receiving a gold medal at the Tokyo Olympics that included a rendition of “Glory to Hong Kong,” and uploading it to YouTube.

Another man was arrested for sedition, a crime under the national security law, last year for playing the tune on a harmonica during Queen Elizabeth II’s funeral.

Given the existence of these other laws, “the Court was not satisfied that the Injunction would be of real utility bearing in mind that the Acts were criminal acts punishable under a robust criminal regime,” read the summary of Chan’s decision.

The Hong Kong government has retroactively enforced the national security law, including with the announcement earlier this month of a cash reward for information that would bring about the arrest of eight activists currently based in the United States, Australia and Britain. The law explicitly states that it applies to Hong Kong residents located outside of the region.

Given it had appealed previous cases, the Hong Kong government was likely to appeal Friday’s ruling, experts said.

In its application for the injunction, the Hong Kong government cited 32 YouTube videos as examples of the content it wanted blocked.

The day before the court decision, a YouTube search for “Hong Kong national anthem” yielded nearly a dozen videos featuring “Glory to Hong Kong” before any results involving the official national anthem Hong Kong shares with China, “March of the Volunteers.”

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Regardless of Friday’s decision, the ambiguity — and seemingly extraterritorial reach — of Hong Kong’s national security law was already causing compliance officers at tech companies “no end of headache,” said May-Ann Lim, director of the Fair Tech Institute at the Access Partnership consultancy.

Since the national security law took effect, tech firms like cloud service providers have performed risk assessments for everything from services to vendors and suppliers to on the ground operations, Lim said.

Companies were already developing their own approach to assessing and addressing the geopolitical angle of doing business in Hong Kong and China, she said.

Adapting to local laws is something tech platforms all over the world already do regularly — like how dating, transport and travel apps show geographically specific matches, said Lim.

Some in Hong Kong’s tech industry say that in the three years since the national security law was imposed on the territory, global tech companies have already changed their approach to Hong Kong.

The fact that Google, OpenAI and Microsoft have not made generative AI products — otherwise accessible in dozens of markets around the world — available in Hong Kong shows that companies are already proactively changing their approach to the city, said Heatherm Huang, co-founder of Measurable AI, which provides consumer data to international e-commerce companies.

“It’s not like the Hong Kong government decided to block those services, the companies decided themselves not to offer them to the Hong Kong public,” said Huang.

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