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IMAGE COPYRIGHTGETTY IMAGES image caption Hong Kong’s thriving film industry had previously enjoyed freedoms not seen in mainland China
The order also instructs censors to prevent and suppress acts that do not uphold the sovereignty and territorial integrity of China.
Hong Kong’s thriving film industry had previously enjoyed freedoms not seen on the mainland.
Last year Beijing imposed a new law to stamp out pro-democracy protests.
The national security law can carry a maximum term of life in prison.
The Film Censorship Authority should stay “vigilant to the portrayal, depiction or treatment of any act or activity which may amount to an offence endangering national security”, the government said in a statement.
It also cites “the common responsibility of the people of Hong Kong to safeguard the sovereignty, unification and territorial integrity of the People’s Republic of China.”
Films go through strict censors on the Chinese mainland and only a select few Western films or documentaries are released commercially each year. Historically Hong Kong has taken a far more liberal approach.
The order has been met with anger and sadness by many on social media who say it will curtail artistic expression.
I loved Hong Kong films long before I came anywhere near Hong Kong or understood a word.
The idea that even films can now be dangerous enough to be censored is just heart-breaking. pic.twitter.com/OD0C2kme4r
— ClaraFerreiraMarques (@ClaraDFMarques) June 11, 2021
— Nathan Law 羅冠聰 (@nathanlawkc) June 11, 2021
What’s the background?
The former British colony was handed back to China in 1997 under a model called “one country, two systems”.
Under the deal, which gave the territory freedoms not available in mainland China, Hong Kong also had its own mini-constitution and an elected parliament.
But fears that this model was being eroded led to huge pro-democracy protests in 2019.
Some protests turned violent and in 2020, China introduced the national security law in the territory.
Beijing said the law would target “sedition” and bring stability. Since the law was enacted in June last year, around 100 people have been arrested.