Fantasia Holdings is having trouble, along with many other Chinese property companies that have connections to the Jiang Zemin faction of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP).
A group of people in yellow shirts resembling Falun Gong T-shirts stood near a Falun Gong information site in Hong Kong on Sept. 21. However, they held banners with slogans that slandered Falun Gong and used loudspeakers to harass those at the site.
Political struggles in China have intensified and spilled over into Hong Kong after the legislative “Two Sessions” of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP).
A human rights research and activist organization has put out a call for information about members of a Communist Party front group operating in Hong Kong.
An accusation of graft, an invitation to lunch, and an altercation on Hong Kong’s streets—these disparate events are part of a larger pattern indicating that Chinese Communist Party factions are using Hong Kong as a stage for their struggles.
A series of violent attacks on Hong Kong media organizations and their owners are intended to have a “chilling effect” on freedom of expression in the city.
For three hours on June 2, members of a Chinese Communist Party front group in Hong Kong engaged in a street struggle with Falun Gong practitioners in a busy thoroughfare, while an increasingly frustrated public came to eject and curse them and the police did little.
An official notice hung in a plastic sleeve on a banner at the Star Ferry in Hong Kong on April 1 seems to mark the end of almost 10 months of unrelenting hate propaganda and harassment targeting Falun Gong practitioners in the special administrative region. That notice may have also served as a white flag of surrender by an increasingly desperate Communist Party faction.
A Hong Kong group with deep ties to China’s domestic security apparatus and the notorious 6-10 Office has recently made attempts to extend the Chinese regime’s persecution of the Falun Gong meditation and exercise discipline to the Hong Kong territory.
Earlier this year an organization began making its presence felt throughout Hong Kong’s streets, harassing people, and presenting Chinese state propaganda wherever its members congregated.
A human rights rally and march last Sunday that focused on human rights abuses by the Chinese regime attracted much interference from a communist-sponsored group in Hong Kong. Local community leaders sharply condemned the interference, in their speeches at the rally.