-
Washington says US, Iran pausing strikes, talks to proceed
-
Stocks mixed and oil rises as US, Iran call end to latest attacks
-
EU, China trade tensions loom over minister visit
-
For sale on Facebook: monkeys, rhino horn and dead pangolins
-
Israelis, Palestinians torn over sacred shrine in city of Hebron
-
In Sudan's Kordofan, a key city reels as paramilitary offensive looms
-
Scheffler to face Hovland in Monday playoff for PGA Travelers title
-
Ryu Hae-ran wins Women's PGA Championship
-
'Burnt out' Stokes leaves England facing tricky questions
-
Germany must win to defy World Cup doubters, says Nagelsmann
-
Critical rescue window closing in Venezuela as quake death toll nears 1,500
-
South Korea's Ryu Hae-ran wins Women's PGA Championship
-
Canada's Marsch praises history-making World Cup 'heroes'
-
Brazil strike confident tone ahead of Japan World Cup clash
-
Co-hosts Canada beat South Africa to reach World Cup last 16 as knockouts begin
-
Israel detonates tunnel, strikes south Lebanon
-
Putin acknowledges fuel shortages after Ukraine strikes
-
Moriyasu praises 'united' Japan on eve of Brazil World Cup clash
-
Canada reach World Cup last 16 as late strike sinks South Africa
-
Looting, theft in Venezuela's earthquake zone add to tragedy
-
Perry stars as Australia knock India out of World Cup
-
Venezuela quakes kill 1,450, time running out to find survivors
-
Stokes 'content' after extraordinary England exit
-
West Indies beat Sri Lanka in first Test
-
Europe swelters as heatwave moves east
-
Asia's World Cup falls apart with just two teams remaining
-
Stokes announces shock England exit as New Zealand eye series win
-
Bromell upsets Lyles, Duplantis shines at Paris Diamond League
-
CAF president Motsepe hails African World Cup successes
-
Man Utd reveal Ugarte knee injury in Uruguay World Cup defeat
-
South Korea coach quits after early World Cup exit
-
Stokes out for 30 in final Test innings after shock England retirement
-
Venezuela quakes kill 1,400, time running out to find survivors
-
Wolff praises 'cold-blooded' Russell, enjoys Antonelli enthusiasm at Austrian GP
-
Hamilton laments lack of power and poor tyre performance
-
Stokes announces shock England exit as Mitchell bats New Zealand into commanding lead
-
Goals galore at record-breaking World Cup
-
Russell overcomes 'tricky run of form' to revive title bid
-
Augusta Tops Best Gold IRA Companies List By Gold Advisor
-
Europe swelters as heatwave moves east, excess deaths rise
-
They support Argentina at the World Cup, but are not Argentine
-
Raducanu hopes to feature at Wimbledon despite injury woe
-
Iran warns ships not to bypass its chosen Hormuz route
-
Russell holds off Verstappen to win Austrian Grand Prix
-
Serena blasts drug test rules ahead of Wimbledon return
-
England captain Stokes to retire from international cricket
-
Ogier wins Acropolis Rally to close in on Evans
-
South Africa maintain World Cup semi-final hopes with nervy win over Bangladesh
-
South Korea president apologises after World Cup group-stage exit
-
Japan's Ogura wins maiden MotoGP as Bezzecchi crashes in Assen
The shadowy messengers delivering threats to Hong Kong civil society
Covert meetings, whispered threats, and mysterious phone calls –- warnings of reprisals by authorities from shadowy messengers are hounding Hong Kong's civil society as China flattens a pro-democracy movement.
Unlike the Chinese mainland, Hong Kong long hosted a vibrant landscape of citizens' groups who cultivated rights advocacy, union mobilisation and civil disobedience as a key fabric of the once-outspoken city.
But a national security law imposed by Beijing in 2020 to snuff out dissent has knee-capped the sector, leaving people fearful that the law's vaguely defined crimes will be used to target their work.
More than 50 civil society groups specialising on issues ranging from labour to education have since announced their closure or been shuttered after national security arrests.
Often the pre-emptive shutdowns came after staff were subjected to a shadowy campaign of threats and intimidation, according to five people AFP spoke to with firsthand knowledge.
The warnings typically arrived via phone calls and messages from so-called "middlemen", who assumed a conversational tone while revealing knowledge of each recipient's personal life. Some came face to face.
Veteran NGO worker Mario -- using a pseudonym due to fears for his safety -- said his colleagues received disconcerting messages from several middlemen last summer.
"They would tell you different stories but at some point the conversation would reach the same conclusion: you must shut down," he told AFP.
A month after first contact, Mario's organisation made the decision to close.
- 'We respect civil society' -
Hong Kong's civil society groups have in recent years been labelled "anti-China elements" by officials and state media.
Beijing has made clear it believes they were a key part of democracy protests that exploded in 2019 with huge rallies and frequent clashes with police.
The national security law's vague language, combined with the middlemen's warnings, suddenly made the threat of lengthy jail terms very real for people like Mario.
"Every normal thing civil society did in the past three decades is now subject to political reprisal," he said.
Shuttered organisations range from the city's largest trade union to Amnesty International, as well as the Hong Kong Alliance -- which used to organise the annual vigil remembering victims of China's Tiananmen Square crackdown in 1989.
Hong Kong's leader Carrie Lam has repeatedly denied that a deliberate campaign targeting organisations is taking place, insisting "we respect civil society".
China's ruling Communist Party and its Liaison Office in Hong Kong have openly accused some groups of violating the law, calling the collapse of these organisations "a choice of their own making".
Both China's Public Security Ministry and its Hong Kong and Macau Affairs Office did not respond to requests for comment from AFP.
The city's Security Bureau and the Committee for Safeguarding National Security also declined to comment on what they called "allegations by individuals".
- New sheriff in town -
Under a "One Country, Two Systems" principle that Beijing agreed to before the 1997 handover by Britain, Hong Kong was allowed to retain key freedoms and autonomy for 50 years.
These included the city being left to police itself using its own laws.
The national security law changed all that, toppling the legal firewall that existed between the financial hub and Beijing.
Among the legislation's many precedent-setting provisions was a clause empowering the mainland's security apparatus to operate openly in Hong Kong.
Days after the law's enactment, mainland security officials requisitioned a hotel for their staff -- unbound by local laws -- as they conducted investigations on perceived threats to China.
The middlemen are regarded as an extension of this new sheriff in town, according to two sources who told AFP they had been contacted directly.
Both described similar face-to-face meetings but asked for key details to be omitted to maintain anonymity.
The meetings were held in a pre-booked private room at public businesses and featured a Cantonese-speaking man claiming to be a mainland security agent.
The conversations stayed largely polite but could flip -- with one source saying the agent he met sounded at times "as if he was interrogating me".
Another said the middleman asked what he thought about disbanding his group, citing various possible security law breaches.
"At first I thought it would be silly to disband when we didn't know what offences we have committed," he told AFP.
"But when he could name a very specific charge, we started to worry."
The messengers possessed personal information, both recalled, dropping details of their relatives and daily habits into conversation.
AFP was not able to independently verify the sources' accounts.
- 'Approach of intimidation' -
The use of middlemen to channel information and deliver political messages is not new.
Beijing's presence in Hong Kong is maintained through the Liaison Office, which has played an increasingly prominent advisory role in recent years -- at times calling in local establishment politicians to be briefed by Chinese officials.
For opposition figures, Beijing preferred using middlemen, according to Ted Hui, a former opposition lawmaker now in Australia.
Such meetings were commonplace -- mainly as intelligence-gathering for authorities' decisions -- until one year before the 2019 protests, he said.
"But after the security law came in, it became an approach of intimidation... So under the table, they can send those middlemen to say things the government cannot openly say."
More than 160 people have been arrested under the national security law so far -- most of them opposition politicians, journalists and rights workers.
Against the backdrop of these detentions, the slow-burn whisper campaign has been an effective tool to shut down organisations critical of the government.
"We are so inexperienced that many of us decided to disband under these threats," said Connie, a rights worker who said she received a call from a stranger giving her a deadline to quit.
Oliver, another rights worker, said he got a text message from someone posing as a "friend" warning he could be arrested.
With so many other groups shuttering and new arrests each month, Oliver felt compelled to take the threat seriously and decided to fold.
"If all those big groups... were not spared, how could you be?"
B.Shevchenko--BTB