HONG KONG (AP) — Hong Kong’s leader said Tuesday his administration would keep monitoring for any non-compliance with a court order that bans a popular protest song, days after YouTube blocked access to dozens of videos of the tune in the city.
The ban targets anyone who broadcasts or distributes “Glory to Hong Kong” — popularly sung during huge anti-government protests in 2019 — to advocate for the separation of the city from China. It also prohibits any actions that misrepresent the song as the national anthem with the intent to insult the anthem.
In his weekly news briefing, Chief Executive John Lee said if the government found any instances of non-compliance, it would then notify the relevant internet platforms about the content of the injunction.
“I believe that operators in general operate within the law, so we will continue to monitor the situation,” Lee said.
Related articles:
Related suggestion:
Ancient tea embraces new flavorSolomon Islands observes campaign blackout day ahead of election — Radio Free AsiaVoters to decide primary runoffs in Alabama's new 2nd Congressional DistrictReal Madrid stay eight points clear after narrow winUniversal Beijing Resort debuts new ChineseUniversal Beijing Resort debuts new ChineseFuture of popular MTV show hangs in the balance after production pauses after five seasonsITTF World Cup Macao 2024 kicks offParis Olympics flame to be lit with elan at Greek cradle of ancient gamesWhat Salman Rushdie says in 'Knife,' the memoir about his stabbing
3.1287s , 6514.734375 kb
Copyright © 2024 Powered by Hong Kong: Authorities will monitor internet platforms for non ,Global Glossary news portal