Newstral
Article
South China Morning Post on 2021-03-30 04:27
Hong Kong’s opposition facing draconian new rules under electoral overhaul approved unanimously in Beijing
Related news
- Beijing mulling drastic overhaul of Election Committee deciding Hong Kong’s chief executive and Legislative Council to curb opposition’s influence: sourcesSouth China Morning Post
- Loyalty’s not enough: Hong Kong’s pro-Beijing parties will gain from elections overhaul, but can expect new pressure to performSouth China Morning Post
- Hong Kong’s electoral overhaul will not block opposition as there are also patriots among pan-democrats, Beijing official saysSouth China Morning Post
- Carrie Lam defends value of election process for Hong Kong’s chief executive post as Beijing mulls drastic overhaul of systemSouth China Morning Post
- ‘Patriots’ only: Beijing plans overhaul of Hong Kong’s electionsThe New York Times
- ‘Patriots’ Only: Beijing Plans Overhaul of Hong Kong’s ElectionsThe New York Times
- Hong Kong’s quiet message to Beijingcsmonitor.com
- Top advisers to Beijing ramp up calls for overhaul of Hong Kong’s political systemSouth China Morning Post
- How Beijing is now taking the lead in overhaul of Hong Kong’s election systemsSouth China Morning Post
- How Beijing is tightening its grip on Hong Kong’s legislaturecsmonitor.com
- Why Beijing feels compelled to destroy Hong Kong’s freedomSydney Morning Herald
- Election tests Hong Kong’s stomach for defying Beijingseattletimes.com
- Beijing loyalist John Lee elected as Hong Kong’s next leaderNew York Post
- China rewrites Hong Kong’s election rules to guarantee Beijing “patriots” stay in powervox.com
- Hong Kong’s controversial Beijing-backed election blueprint defeated by lawmakersThe Globe and Mail
- Hong Kong national security law unanimously passed by Beijing, expected to become effective on July 1South China Morning Post
- Draconian ‘National Security’ law already muzzling Hong Kong’s journalistsfreedom.press
- New chief convenor in Hong Kong’s revamped electoral system will have ‘transcendent powers representing Beijing’South China Morning Post
- What next for Hong Kong’s Legco? Beijing meeting will decide if lawmakers continue for an extra year until pollsSouth China Morning Post