Shenzhen city: Key link between China and Hong Kong but is still worlds apart


Devdiscourse News Desk | Hong Kong | Updated: 17-08-2019 20:28 IST | Created: 17-08-2019 19:18 IST
Shenzhen city: Key link between China and Hong Kong but is still worlds apart
Representative Image. Image Credit: ANI
  • Country:
  • China

The southern Chinese metropolis of Shenzhen shares a border with Hong Kong and is a key link between China and the Asian financial hub. The city of Shenzhen is being considered as the launchpad for China as calls for greater freedom intensifies in Hong Kong. But even though the Chinese city is just a few kilometers from Hong Kong, the ideology of people is worlds apart.

"They're just ruining themselves," said one taxi driver, when asked about the protests in Hong Kong. "What can they do when their economy goes and no travelers want to visit?" Crossing between the cities is not straightforward for mainlanders, who need to get an entry-exit permit and face limits on the number of times they can travel to Hong Kong, which enjoys rights unseen in mainland China.

Shenzhen was dragged into the unrest after Chinese state-run media reported that elements of the People's Armed Police were assembling there. In recent days state media have broadcast images of Chinese military forces and armored personnel carriers in the city -- raising fears of a possible military intervention by Beijing.

The former British colony of Hong Kong returned to Chinese rule 22 years ago and operates under a "one country, two systems" framework which gives citizens the right to protest and enjoy the freedom of speech. Across the border, Shenzhen sits behind the "Great Firewall" that restricts access to news and information and allows the government to censor and push its own narrative.

Hong Kong protestors have argued their rights are being eroded by an increasingly assertive Beijing -- but these views find little support on the streets of Shenzhen. "The Communist Party isn't afraid when things are stirred up," said one resident surnamed Chen.

"Young people don't really think, they've had it good," says another, speaking on condition of anonymity. After initially scrubbing any mention of the Hong Kong demonstrations from the internet in June, the government later blamed the protests on collusion with "Western forces", before this week dubbing them "the beginning of terrorism".

Beijing's claims that foreign forces are involved in the Hong Kong protests have also found support in Shenzhen. "The Americans have surrounded our country," one man surnamed Feng told media.

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