Lunar New Year Dinner at 🥟 Yum Cha & ㊗ Fai Chun Writing
Feb
10

Lunar New Year Dinner at 🥟 Yum Cha & ㊗ Fai Chun Writing

To celebrate the year of the dragon, we will arrange a social dinner at Yum Cha Restaurant in Oslo.

Dinner starts at 6 pm. Fai Chun writing and mingling before the dinner from 5 pm.

The event is open to all. Feel free to invite your friends and family! However, registration is required because we have to reserve the tables and food in advance. Please register latest on 3rd February so that we can inform the restaurant about the number of guests and any food preferences. Registration and food arrangement via this Google Form: Registration

Facebook event

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Annual general meeting 2024
Feb
10

Annual general meeting 2024

Hong Kong Committee in Norway invites you to our Annual General Meeting! During the meeting, we will go through what we have done in 2023, our future plans in 2024. After the meeting, we will celebrate Lunar New Year at dim sum restaurant "Yum Cha". See a seperate Facebook event: https://fb.me/e/7ZN1tquBX

Link to the agenda and meeting documents will be made public via this Google Drive one week before the Annual General Meeting: Info for AGM

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Norges handlingsrom - referat fra “Full day seminar on China”
Nov
12

Norges handlingsrom - referat fra “Full day seminar on China”

Det som skjer i Midtens rike får altfor lite oppmerksomhet i norsk offentlighet. 12. november arrangerte seks organisasjoner et heldagsseminar om utviklingen i Kina. Flere utenlandske eksperter deltok, sammen med ledende norske Kina-kjennere. Vi ønsket å kaste lys over hvilket handlingsrom Norge har i møtet med et selvhevdende, mektig diktatur. Alle seminarets samtaler er tilgjengelige på YouTube.

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Full-day seminar on China @ Chateau Neuf Oslo
Nov
12

Full-day seminar on China @ Chateau Neuf Oslo

China is emerging as a superpower: How is Norway affected, and how big are the consequences for global international relations? How can we concretize achievable goals for our relations with China that also defend our core values?

Welcome to a full-day public seminar at Chateau Neuf in Oslo, with keynote speeches, panel debates and screening of the documentary "The Hong Konger".

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Avduking av Pillar of Shame
May
25

Avduking av Pillar of Shame

Unveiling of Pillar of Shame!

On Wednesday 25 May at 1:30 pm , we invite you to the unveiling of the sculpture Pillar of Shame in the University Garden to the Faculty of Law at UiO. The Pillar of Shame, or the Pillar of Shame, honors the victims of some of the most outrageous human rights violations of our time: the 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre and the attack on freedom of expression in Hong Kong. In China today, it is forbidden to talk about the massacre in the Tiananmen Square, and the authorities are doing everything they can to erase the history from the memory of the people.

The original sculpture, which it will exhibit is a version of, was exhibited in Hong Kong from 1997. On December 23, 2021, the sculpture was removed from the University. This came in the wake of several harsh sentences for violations of Hong Kong's new security law against people who have criticized China.

Read more about Shame Support here: Pillar of Shame (galschiot.com)

Program:

Speech by the artist Jens Galschiøt
Speech by Hong Kong activist Glacier Kwong
Speech from the Hong Kong Committee in Norway
Speech from UiO
Musical elements from Samuel Brandt
The speaker is John Peder Egenæs, Amnesty International

-The sculpture Pillar of Shame will be exhibited in the University Garden until 23 June

-The unveiling is a collaboration between Amnesty International, the Hong Kong Committee in Norway and the Oslo Freedom Forum

Facebook Link

Speech of the event:

Good afternoon, I am Jessica Chiu, leader of Hong Kong Committee in Norway. For over thirty years, Hongkongers have shown our solidarity to the fight for democracy in mainland China. In 1989, from mid-May to June 4, there were at least three massive demonstrations in Hong Kong supporting the student-led prodemocractic protests in Beijing, each with over one million people. And hundreds of Hong Kong students, reporters, and individuals travelled to Tiananmen Square to support the students.

At that time, the Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Patriotic Democratic Movements in China was formed. Since 1989, the Hong Kong Alliance has organised an annual candlelight vigil at Victoria Park in Hong Kong. 35 to 180 thousand people gathered peacefully in Hong Kong on June 4 every year regardless of the weather, with cooperation with the police. The candlelight vigil represents our freedom of assembly.

On university campuses in Hong Kong there were monuments of Tiananmen that remind us of the history and the students in Beijing. The Pillar of Shame is one of the most well-known Tiananmen tributes. Between 2008 and 2011, I was a bachelor student at the University of Hong Kong. I walked past the Pillar of Shame, painted in orange, every week. I crossed the Swire bridge every day, in front of my student residency, the Swire Hall. On the bridge, a slogan that commemorates the Tiananmen crackdown was painted. All these monuments are symbols for our freedom of expression.

While Hong Kong has been known as an international financial hub, it has also prided itself as the “conscience of China”. Hong Kong was a place that continued the fight for democracy and justice for people in the city, and for the billion population in mainland China. Hong Kong has been a city carrying the torch for democracy in China.

In 2014, tens of thousands of Hongkongers participated in the umbrella movement demanding universal suffrage, meaning free elections of the Legislative Council and the Chief Executive. Such elections are stated as the ultimate goals in Hong Kong’s mini constitution. 12 prominent activists were convicted of unlawful assembly.

Between April 2019 and February 2020, people in Hong Kong took part in a series of massive demonstrations that first demanded withdrawal of the extradition law amendment bill, and later developed into demanding investigation of police violence against protesters and universal suffrage. The largest protests were participated by 1-2 million people. Despite the risk of prosecution and police brutality, people in Hong Kong took to the streets to voice the demand for true democracy.

In 2020 the June 4 candlelight vigil was banned for the first time in 31 years under the pretext of the pandemic. It was announced that 3000 riot police would be deployed. Despite the ban and the threat by the police, in the evening of June 4, tens of thousands of people in Hong Kong gathered in Victoria Park for a candlelight vigil. People in Hong Kong knew that the days for commemorating June 4th were coming to an end.

By the end of June 2020, Beijing bypassed the Legislative Council and promulgated Hong Kong’s national security law, with punishments ranging from 3 years to life imprisonment.

The national security law has removed basic human rights that people in Hong Kong used to enjoy, including the freedom to protest, to assembly, freedom of the press, and freedom of expression. The phrase “June 4th Tiananmen”, which has been censored in China, is now a sensitive topic in Hong Kong.

The authorities have also used a colonial era law to suppress our freedom of speech and freedom of publication. Editors and board members of the independent media outlet Stand News were arrested and accused of conspiring to publish seditious material. Publishing a children’s picture book about sheep is seditious, according to Beijing’s puppets in Hong Kong.

In 2021, the candlelight vigil was banned again.

Chow Hang-tung, who co-chaired the Hong Kong Alliance, posted on social media urging people to commemorate the event privately by lighting a candle. Chow was later arrested for this social media post and sentenced to 15 months behind bars.

Monuments that pay tribute to the victims of Tiananmen have been removed from university campuses in Hong Kong. The University of Hong Kong removed The Pillar of Shame during the Christmas holiday last year for a shameful reason – “based on the latest risk assessment and legal advice". The slogan on the Swire Bridge has been painted over and replaced with potted plants. The once proud “conscience of China”, Hong Kong, is being destroyed by the shameless leaders in Hong Kong.

I will now read an excerpt of the mitigation plea by Chow Hang-tung in the case raised against her for seeking to keep the memory of June 4 alive:

The greatest injustice remains hidden and unmentionable, for who is truly responsible for inciting hundreds of thousands of people to gather in Victoria Park on June 4th, year after year? They are the murderers who killed at will in Beijing 32 years ago. Yet the killers were never punished by any court of law, while those who demand truth and accountability were relentlessly criminalised. This has continued non-stop for 32 years in mainland China, and is now also happening in Hong Kong.

With power and law in their hands, the killers think that they can control the discourse of right and wrong, guilt and innocence. I, for one, refuse to play along and submit to my so-called guilt. If this country still cares to maintain any resemblance of fairness, let’s put those murderers on trial instead of us. Let’s put those criminals behind bars instead of honouring them as our great leaders. Let the truth of Tiananmen Square be freely discussed and redress be given to the long suffering Tiananmen Mothers.

That ends the mitigation plea quote. Over 10 000 have been arrested due to their participation in protests in Hong Kong 2019-2020. A large majority have still not had their cases taken to the courts.

In under 3 years, over 1000 people in Hong Kong have become political prisoners.

For the last two years, 183 have been arrested by the national security police. 87 are remanded in custody, with unknown dates of trials, potentially facing lengthy sentences. We will honour their bravery today by reading their names.

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APPELL FOR GUI MINHAI
Jan
26

APPELL FOR GUI MINHAI

Gui Minhai ble født i Kina i 1964. I 1988 flyttet Gui til Sverige. I 1992 ble han svensk statsborger, og frasa seg samtidig sitt kinesiske statsborgerskap. På midten av 1990-tallet studerte han ved Gøteborgs universitet. Etter dette valgte Gui seg en karriere som forfatter og forlegger av Beijing-kritisk litteratur, og bosatte seg i Hongkong i 2006.

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Film Fra Sør
Nov
12
to 21 Nov

Film Fra Sør

Screening of award-winning documentary When a City Rises, followed by a panel discussion about the Hong Kong situation. Panelists include Hong Kong activists Eric Lai (via Skype), Jessica Chiu from Hong Kong Committee in Norway, Norwegian politician Petter Eide. Moderated by researcher from Peace Research Institute Oslo Stein Tønnesson.

Mer info: https://www.filmfrasor.no/no/arrangement/2021/dkr-when-a-city-rises

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Demonstrasjon mot kommunistpartiets menneskerettighetsbrudd
Oct
1

Demonstrasjon mot kommunistpartiets menneskerettighetsbrudd

Kinesiske myndighetenes manglende respekt for menneskerettigheter er en felles bekymring for uighurer, tibetanere og hongkongere. I forbindelse med 1. oktober, dagen for kommunistpartiets maktovertagelse, arrangerte vi sammen en demonstrasjon for å protestere mot den kinesiske statens grove menneskerettsbrudd mot etniske minoriteter og politiske regimemotstandere. Samtidig står vi i solidaritet med Taiwan som blir utsatt for gjentatte suverenitetsbrudd.

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Hong Kong Protest Movement: preserving the truth
Jun
12

Hong Kong Protest Movement: preserving the truth

Screening of documentaries about the Hong Kong protest movement which started in 2019, exhibition, lecture, and panel conversation

This June marks 2 years since the start of the Hong Kong protest movement. A full-day free public event will be arranged at Litteraturhuset in Oslo to arouse public awareness on the Hong Kong situation. Programme includes screening of documentaries, including the award-winning film “Do Not Split”, exhibition about the protest movement, a lecture on protests’ background, a panel conversation titled “2019 Hong Kong eye witnesses’, and a set-up for the public to write letters to jailed activists.

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