Seattle’s CHAZ: A Bastion of Change or Short-Lived Utopia?

Hundreds of protesters have taken over seven blocks in the Capitol Hill neighbourhood of Seattle, transforming it into the ‘Capitol Hill Autonomous Zone’, or ‘CHAZ’.

Revolution is an idea. And in order to survive, ideas must be embodied across time and space. One such embodiment has come to fruition with remarkable gusto in Seattle amidst the protests raging across the US in the wake of the murder of George Floyd.

Hundreds of protesters have taken over seven blocks in the Capitol Hill neighbourhood of Seattle, Washington, transforming it into the ‘Capitol Hill Autonomous Zone’, or ‘CHAZ’, with the aim to provide an example of how a community without formal policing can function.

Following several days of clashes between protesters in Seattle and law enforcement authorities (during which the officers deployed tear gas, flash grenades, and rubber bullets), the local police vacated its East Precinct headquarters on June 8.

Protesters, who have been camping in the area for days, promptly stepped in to declare that “THIS SPACE IS NOW PROPERTY OF THE SEATTLE PEOPLE.”

There are currently no police officers in the zone, and some armed protesters are monitoring who enters and exits the place, even as all those in favour of the Black Lives Matter movement and against police brutalities are urged to join in.

Over the last week, CHAZ has not only been inaugurated as a “safe and peaceful place” where disgruntled Americans can channelise their frustrations towards creating constructive change, it has also assumed the character of a Harlem-esque locus of art, with speeches, concerts, and movie nights, which included an open-air screening of 13th, a documentary by Ava DuVernay exploring the history of racial inequality in America.

Animating with a zeal that is reminiscent of the Occupy movement from a few years ago, CHAZ contains umbrellas as makeshift shelters, portable toilets and restrooms, a small garden, a medic station for the handing out of masks and sanitisers, a “No Cop Co-op” for free food and other necessary supplies, a designated smoking area, and a series of shrines dedicated to the memory of George Floyd and other victims of extrajudicial violence.


Also read: #BlackLivesMatter: Let’s Not Forget India’s Closeted Racism


Nikkita Oliver, who ran for mayor of Seattle in 2017 and is one of the most prominent voices emanating from CHAZ, told Vanity Fair that “the beauty of what’s happening now [is]…there are so many leaders all over the city doing their own thing but aligning to the common values and goals, which is incredibly powerful”.

These values and goals include three main demands that protesters at CHAZ have been asking for (though they have also presented a more comprehensive list of potential measures in their blog) – defunding the police, investing in community healthcare services, and dropping criminal charges against protesters.

President Donald Trump has been swift in his condemnation of CHAZ, labelling the protesters “domestic terrorists” and urging the Seattle mayor, Jenny Durkan, as well as Jay Inslee, the governor of Washington, to “take back your city” from those Trump believes are “ugly anarchists”.

Neither Durkan nor Inslee has acted in accordance with Trump’s instructions, with the former going so far as to say that the president’s partisan framing of the protesters is “simply not true” and that Trump should head “back to your bunker”.

In light of all this, an obvious question emerges: is CHAZ a genuine reflection of community policing that can be seen as a model of change, or is it a matter of time before this “autonomous zone” is dismantled and CHAZ becomes a short-lived manifestation of a pipe dream?

According to Durkan, who seems in no mood to jump to a rash decision about CHAZ, Trump cannot send in the military to evict the protesters and tear down the place, as such actions would be both “illegal and unconstitutional”. Durkan’s stance, as of now, is to listen to the community and cooperate with them to arrive at a new understanding of life in one of America’s most bustling localities.

Critics of CHAZ, including a blithe Fox News, have alternatively described it as the “196th country” in the world, a “burgeoning republic”, and a “refugee camp” that is a product of the so-called woke-ness of Seattle’s progressive residents who do not have a manifesto for the future. In reality, while CHAZ claims not to be a part of the US (a sign at one of its blockades reads, “You are now leaving the USA”), it is, of course, not an official nation and does not have any formal structure of governance. The most likely aim that CHAZ wants to culminate is the reformation of Seattle through a drastic overhauling of administrative functioning.

In the blog listing their blueprint for transformation, the brains behind CHAZ have suggested numerous moves that are ostensible outgrowths of common sense but have not yet been implemented by those in power, such as the public distribution of footage from body cameras fitted onto police officers (which are to be kept active at all times), releasing the names of officials involved in police brutality, bringing an end to “prosecutorial immunity”, eliminating youth and for-profit prisons, creating community-based localised anti-crime systems, among others.

What, however, makes things trickier are their more radical requirements, such as the total abolition of policing as well as the retrial of all people of colour (convicted of violent crimes) in front of a jury comprising their community peers.

The blanket nature of some of these demands has led to depictions of CHAZ as fetishisers of racist reconfiguration and far-left extremists indulging in a bit of “Communist cosplay in the streets”. The truth, though, maybe more complex, for CHAZ, notwithstanding some of its incredible ambitions, is a space for debate and discussion, not for ideology and imposition. The protesters, open to negotiation, do not claim to be the final authority for an incipient sovereign state and their assembly should not be seen as the building blocks for an armed secession.

Instead, what CHAZ stands for is the emergence of all the tensions and insecurities that have formed the undertows of American politics for years, rising to the unmissable surface of tangible activism, catalysed by the killing of George Floyd, and channelised through a spirit of compassion and cooperation that has been evident internationally, from the agitating streets of Hong Kong to the electrified ambience of Delhi’s Shaheen Bagh.

This makes the prospect of CHAZ’s ultimate fate one of utmost importance, not just for the fervour gripping America, but also for the precedent it sets for dissent and discursive politics all across the globe.

So far, CHAZ has managed to retain its emancipatory spirit without plunging into chaos, extortion, or violence. If it is able to sustain itself across the next weeks and months without spilling over into the anarchy that its opponents claim is its destiny, it would not only have etched its well-deserved place in history, but also initiated constructive change towards a reimagined America, proving that revolution can still move from idea to reality.

Featured image credit: Reuters

Why the Youth Have Been Protesting in Hong Kong for Years

A protestor explains how Hong Kong is trying to protect its freedoms every passing weekend.

Hong Kong: On October 6, Tony reached the last intersection of Causeway Bay in Hong Kong at exactly 1 o’clock in the afternoon. Two days ago, on October 4, Carrie Lam, the Chief executive of Hong Kong had invoked Emergency law and announced a ban on face masks. This was going to be the 17th weekend in a row since June this year to coordinate a protest. The schedule for the next ten days was brainstormed over Telegram channels and on this day, everyone had started gathering with masks and umbrellas.

“I have been doing this for seven years and we have come far,” says Tony.

He is 24, medium built, long hair tightly pulled into a man bun. He is wearing a T-shirt, pants and sneakers – all black – just like the thousands of protestors who had gathered at Causeway Bay, the retail heart of Hong Kong, on this day. Surrounded by skyscrapers and malls with some of the highest rent rates in the world, the area is one of the most crowded in the city. It has also been a key protest site in the past few years.

Pro-democracy graffiti on Hong Kong streets. Photo: Neha Dixit

Till 1997, Hong Kong, a global city and an international financial hub, was a British colony. It was handed over to China on some conditions, including the ‘one country two systems’ and the adoption of Hong Kong’s ‘mini Constitution’ called the Basic Law. The Hong Kong Basic Law ensured that the city will retain its capitalist economic system and currency, the Hong Kong Dollar, the legal system, the legislative system and people’s rights and freedom as a special administrative region (SAR) of China for 50 years. This arrangement allowed Hong Kong to function as its own entity and is set to expire in 2047.

While China’s central government in Beijing maintains control over Hong Kong’s foreign affairs and the legal interpretation of the Basic Law, since 2014, the momentum to demand universal suffrage as promised in Basic Law has led to massive pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong. A large number of participants are students and young professionals. They often use masks and umbrellas to escape surveillance. “Protests are planned on weekends so that maximum number of people can participate,” says Tony.

Families come out with their children in large numbers on weekend protests. Photo: Neha Dixit

§

Tony’s training in activism and protests started at the age of 16 in 2012. He was a high school student when he joined Scholarism, a student pressure group to protest against the ‘Moral and National Education’ school curriculum put forward by the Hong Kong government that year.

Scholarism had 200 members and garnered wide support from students. The curriculum was aimed at instilling patriotism and strengthening Chinese identity among Hong Kong’s youngsters. This is around the time when fears of mainland China’s growing influence in Hong Kong were growing. “The curriculum was clearly designed to brainwash us with Communist Party propaganda. Some parts of it even whitewashed the Tiananmen massacre and tried to present China in a favourable light.”

The Tiananmen massacre took place on June 4, 1989, in Beijing. Thousands of students had occupied the central parts of mainland China’s capital for almost a month. They were demanding reforms around freedom of speech, freedom of the press, democracy and more accountability. The government declared martial law and sent troops to vacate the area. In the process, several thousand protestors and bystanders were killed and a large number were also wounded.

Tony had heard stories about the massacre from his parents, who are both schoolteachers. “Three students from Peking University, who they had worked with closely in 1987 when they came to the University of Hong Kong for an exchange program were killed,” he says. “With the new National education curriculum, I was feeling stifled the same way that my parents’ friends would have felt.”

On August 30, 2012, Tony was one of the 50 protestors from Scholarism to occupy the Hong Kong government headquarters for a month. “We stayed in tents in the public park near the government offices. There was rain, fatigue. We didn’t even shower for weeks on end,” he recounts.

In the next few days, the movement successfully gathered thousands protesting against the proposed curriculum and led to the government backing down. On September 8, the then Chief Executive of Hong Kong, C.Y. Leung, announced the temporary withdrawal of the ‘Moral and National Education Course.’  The course has not been reintroduced till date and the protests by the young students were seen as a success.

This was also the time when Xi Jinping, the current President of the People’s Republic of China assumed office in March 2013. The tremors of the significant increase in censorship and mass surveillance under his office were also felt regularly in Hong Kong.

Most students like Tony, who were part of the movement against the ‘Moral and National Education’, continued to remain active in the social and democracy movement in Hong Kong.

“Once you become conscious of something, it is very difficult to ignore it. Freedom of speech, uninhibited access to the internet and many other things. We were not ready to give them up,” says Tony.

Large number of protestors wear masks to defy government ban. Photo: Neha Dixit

Just two years later, in September 2014, the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress, the highest organ of state power and the national legislature of the People’s Republic of China, proposed reforms to the Hong Kong electoral system. The decision was seen as restrictive and a way for the Communist Party of China to pre-screen the candidates for the Chief Executive of Hong Kong. “What kind of fake system was this. It was like, ‘You can vote, but we will tell you who to vote for’,” says Tony.

This time, the mass protests lasted for almost three months, from September 22 to December 15, 2014. Students from various groups led a strike and soon enough, several groups started to occupy several major city intersections in Hong Kong. “I was here at the same spot four years ago as part of the sit-in protests at Causeway Bay,” says Tony, as he points to a traffic light on the other side of the road. Posters saying ‘I need real universal suffrage’ had been put up across all universities and major market areas in the city.

Tony says the police’s tactics provoked more anger among common citizens. “They used tear gas and physical attacks, which made common citizens all the more angry,” he recalls. His parents, who until then disapproved Tony’s fulltime involvement in activism, also joined in. “They were upset that many children like me, who were participating in peaceful civil disobedience, were at the receiving end of police violence. Just like Tiananmen Square,” he says. It is estimated that 100,000 protestors participated in the sit-ins at any given time. The campaign was termed as the Occupy movement, now also interchangeably known as the Umbrella movement.

A large number of protestors started using umbrellas as a tool of passive resistance to the Hong Kong police’s use of pepper spray and tear gas to disperse crowds during this 79-day occupation to demand transparent elections.

After two and a half months, in December police started arresting and clearing several protest sites. Causeway Bay, where Tony stood today, was the last spot to be evacuated on December 15, 2014.

The protests ended without any political concessions from the government. The then-Hong Kong Chief executive Leung and other mainland Chinese officials criticised the campaign as “unpatriotic”. These reactions were seen as a huge assault on academic freedoms and civil liberties of common citizens of Hong Kong.

“They fanned the fire further. The demand for universal suffrage became stronger since then,” says Tony.

Overbridge with anti government posters. Photo: Neha Dixit

§

The events of the past four years have been viewed as repeated assaults on Hong Kong’s freedom. In 2015, five staff members of the Causeway Bay bookstore which sold political books that were banned in mainland China went missing. A year later, Lam Wing-kee, one of the owners, returned to Hong Kong and described how he and his associates were kept under detention in mainland China. Similarly, disqualification of candidates for the legislature and violence against journalists added to the growing dissent in Hong Kong society.

On June 12, this year, the new Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam announced a controversial extradition Bill that would have allowed the extradition of suspects to China to be tried under the mainland’s opaque judicial system. This was being introduced in the light of the growing pro-democracy movement. The Bill was seen as an attempt to erode Hong Kong’s legal system and its built-in safeguards. This fear was attributed to China’s newfound ability, through this Bill, to arrest voices of political dissent in Hong Kong.

This triggered another round of protests. Under pressure, the Bill was withdrawn on September 4. Yet, protests have continued, spanning more than four months now.

Tony says that the clarion call for the protestors over the past four months has been the famous Hong Kong-American martial arts star, Bruce Lee’s saying, ‘Be water, my friend.’ He says, “The movement is fluid and moves in unexpected waves. Protestors move swiftly from one place to another, unlike in 2014, when the sit-in was the main protest tactic.” They move from one area to another, occupying several key intersections, police headquarters, government buildings, marking their presence everywhere.

Anti-China graffiti can be found all over Hong Kong. Photo: Neha Dixit

“We have first aid teams travelling with us. We take our helmets, laser lights, spare t-shirts, water and snacks along for swift action,” he says.

Most demonstrators are tech-savvy and use online forums and encrypted Telegram channels to coordinate their tactics, canvass views and forge consensus. “Social media, including Telegram, is a big part of our movement but we use it for activism in the offline world, where people show up instead of retweeting,” says Tony.

Tony says that this time, the small organising groups are also using the lessons learnt in 2014. “The idea is to get more citizens involved instead of alienating them. So we make sure that ordinary people don’t get inconvenienced.”

The tactic has been successful and has seen protestor numbers swell up to millions regularly.

The previous protests were also centralised around organised groups like Scholarism, Occupy Central with Love and Peace and their leaders Joshua Wong, Benny Tai and others. These groups and leaders directed the protestors. However, the current protests are leaderless.

Tony says that for now, this is an advantage, “This gives people the flexibility to make their own decisions on how they want to participate. This is the reason why millions are turning up every weekend. Most importantly, the old and the common person who had reservations a few years ago are now joining the protests. It is more organic.”

A number of older people are now coming out in support of the young pro-democracy protestors. Photo: Neha Dixit

Tony points out that this time, they are also working at rewarding businesses who support the movement. He says, “In 2014, many common people were upset because of the financial losses caused to them because of road blockades and shutdowns.” He says that they have created an internal list of ‘yellow ribbon’ business firms. An app helps shoppers give these firms business instead of the ‘blue ribbon’ ones. This colour demarcation first came up in Hong Kong during the Umbrella movement in 2014, when protestors started sporting yellow ribbon and also tying it in public spaces. The colour symbolises the campaign for universal suffrage and was previously used in the women’s vote campaign in the US in the 19th century. Those who disagreed with the movement started wearing blue ribbons, the colour of the police uniform, to show their support for the authorities instead.

The battle lines amongst corporate entities are becoming neater by the day, based on political affiliations. And the war is being fought accordingly.

One of the identified blue business in Hong Kong is the American chain Starbucks, which has been repeatedly vandalised by protestors in the past few months. The Hong Kong franchise of this chain is owned by Maxim Caterers. In September, this year, Annie Wu, the daughter of the Maxim Group’s founder, criticised activists as “radical protesters” at the United Nations Human Rights Council.

Starbucks cafes are repeatedly vandalised by protestors. Photo: Neha Dixit

In retaliation, Chinese corporates are building international pressure to penalise voices and organisations supporting the protests. Recently, when an executive of the NBA’s Houston Rockets tweeted his support for the Hong Kong protests, there was an immediate backlash from Chinese authorities. The Rockets apologised, but the government decided to suspend NBA exhibition games in China, one of the largest markets for the association.

Similarly, on October 9, Apple removed an app that enabled protesters in Hong Kong to track the police, a day after facing intense criticism from Chinese state media, plunging the technology giant deeper into the complicated politics of a country that is fundamental to its business.

This has not stopped protestors from coming up with creative ways to take the campaign forward.

In September this year, the hashtag #birdgoldingchallenge trended on Twitter to mark the fifth year of the Umbrella challenge. Protestors were called to fold Origami paper cranes and called the bird  “Freenix” – a reference to phoenix. In Japanese culture, these cranes can wish for recovery from illness and injury. The protestors filled the Times Square in Causeway Bay with hundreds of these birds while sloganeering ‘Liberate Hong Kong.’

These months have also witnessed increasing violent confrontations with the Hong Kong police and arrest of more than 1,000 people. On October 5, MTR, the city’s underground public transport, was shut down for the first time in 40 years as several stations were vandalised. On October 1, a teenager was shot in the upper left part of his body by the police. Thousands gathered in support of him the next day.

“Hong Kong is known as a global city. And here we are being subjected to the worst form of police brutality. We do not deserve it,” says Tony.

While this has been largely a movement of young people, in the past few months, older citizens have formed informal groups to act as a buffer between the police and protestors. They act as the first line of defence.

Protestors have also used bricks to combat police violence. I tell Tony that in Kashmir, which has been under lockdown by the Indian government for 79 days and has faced alleged human rights violations for several years, young protestors also use stone-pelting as a way to protest. “I don’t know much about Kashmir. But it is a sign of people losing complete trust in the authorities. It is the police brutality and the stifling ways of the Hong Kong government that are responsible for the violent methods of the protestors. It is they who should be blamed, not the other way round. If we burn, you burn with us,” he says.

He pauses and then asks, “So is Delhi also jammed with protestors for Kashmir?” I tell him that it is not consistent and massive.

He looks confused, “But we heard in 2013, how so many Indians came together for weeks to protest the rape of a student. So how come they are quiet when millions of people have been under lockdown for 75 days?”

I have no answer.

I ask Tony for his second name. He refuses. “There is no point identifying me. Every single black mask here represents me. We are anonymous and yet focused. I am and will be every young person in the protests till Hong Kong is free,” he says as he bids goodbye and disappears into the sea of umbrellas.

Along with the rain, sloganeering also starts, “Hong Kongers, resist.”

Protestors raise hands in solidarity with the slogan, ‘Hong Kongers, resist!’ Photo: Neha Dixit

Neha Dixit is an independent journalist based out of New Delhi. She covers politics, gender and social justice in South Asia.

Hong Kong Police Charges Protest Leaders Day After New Leader Chosen

One of the founders, Benny Tai said the activists might plead guilty to the charges in a spirit of civil disobedience.

Founders of the Occupy Central civil disobedience movement (L-R), academic Chan Kin-man, academic Benny Tai and reverend Chu Yiu-ming attend a campaign to kick off the movement in Hong Kong, China August 31, 2014. Credit: Reuters

Founders of the Occupy Central civil disobedience movement (L-R), academic Chan Kin-man, academic Benny Tai and reverend Chu Yiu-ming attend a campaign to kick off the movement in Hong Kong, China August 31, 2014. Credit: Reuters

Hong Kong: Hong Kong police on Monday charged nine organisers of the 2014 pro-democracy demonstrations, just a day after a new Beijing-backed leader was chosen, vowing to unite society.

The move provoked anger and disbelief among protesters and heightened political tension in the Chinese-ruled city.

“We want real universal suffrage,” over 100 supporters wielding yellow umbrellas, a symbol of the 2014 protests, shouted outside the Wanchai police headquarters on Monday night as the nine organisers went inside, pumping their fists into the air.

“Never give up.”

Former chief secretary Carrie Lam was chosen on Sunday by a 1,200-person committee to lead the city, pledging in her victory speech to unite political divisions that have hindered policy-making and legislative work.

A woman holds up a yellow umbrella, the symbol of the Occupy Central movement, as she and others protest during the election for Hong Kong's next chief executive near the venue where the vote is taking place in Hong Kong, China March 26, 2017. Credit: Reuters

A woman holds up a yellow umbrella, the symbol of the Occupy Central movement, as she and others protest during the election for Hong Kong’s next chief executive near the venue where the vote is taking place in Hong Kong, China March 26, 2017. Credit: Reuters

The protest leaders dubbed “the Occupy trio” – law professor Benny Tai, sociology professor Chan Kin-man and reverend Chu Yiu-ming – were each charged with conspiracy to commit public nuisance, incitement to commit public nuisance and incitement to incite public nuisance.

The charges carry a maximum sentence of seven years, Tai said, adding the activists might plead guilty, in a spirit of civil disobedience.

Six others including two legislators and two former student protest leaders were also charged with crimes related to public nuisance during the 2014 unrest, which brought parts of the city to a standstill for months.

“I am already mentally prepared for this, but I am very worried about Hong Kong’s future,” Chan told Reuters.

Protesters scuffle with police during the election for Hong Kong's next chief executive near the venue where the vote is taking place in Hong Kong, China March 26, 2017. Credit: Reuters

Protesters scuffle with police during the election for Hong Kong’s next chief executive near the venue where the vote is taking place in Hong Kong, China, March 26, 2017. Credit: Reuters

Timing “alarming”

Amnesty International’s China researcher William Nee called the timing of the prosecutions “very alarming”.

“They’ve had years to consider these cases and they just decided to do this now. It does naturally make one think that political considerations might be at play,” Nee said.

It was not clear why authorities had waited so long to pursue the charges.

The Department of Justice (DoJ) said in a statement the prosecution “should not be politicised”.

“Some people in the community surmise that action was taken against those involved in the ‘Occupy Movement’ today because they were so instructed by the chief executive-elect, Mrs Carrie Lam,” it said.

“The DoJ stresses that such surmising is completely baseless and utterly untrue.”

The police arrested a total of 1,003 people in relation to the protests, of which 216 had been charged as of end of January, the secretary for justice said last month.

That included student protest leader Joshua Wong, who was found guilty of unlawful assembly but was spared jail time.

Separately, a former senior police officer who was filmed beating passersby with his baton during the 2014 protests was charged later on Monday with assault.

Asked by reporters about the timing of the charges against the protesters, Lam said she did not know about the prosecutions beforehand and could not intervene with prosecutions carried out by the administration of incumbent leader Leung Chun-ying.

“I made it very clear that I want to unite society and bridge the divide that has been causing us concern, but all these actions should not compromise the rule of law in Hong Kong and also the independent prosecution process that I have just mentioned,” said Lam, who will take office on July 1.

Chan disputed this.

“The message is strong. Carrie Lam said she wanted to mend the society, but the message we got today is prosecution. I don’t see how the society’s cracks can be mended,” Chan told Reuters.

Carrie Lam waves during news conference after she won the election for Hong Kong's chief executive in Hong Kong, China March 26, 2017. Credit: Reuters

Carrie Lam waves during news conference after she won the election for Hong Kong’s chief executive in Hong Kong, China March 26, 2017. Credit: Reuters

China’s XI to visit in July?

Hong Kong was returned from British to Chinese rule in 1997, with the promise of a high degree of autonomy and other freedoms not enjoyed on the mainland. But Communist Party rulers in Beijing never hid their anger at the protests, which they called illegal.

Lam met with incumbent leader Leung earlier on Monday. They shook hands and expressed confidence in a “smooth and effective” leadership transition.

Lam has been Leung’s deputy as chief secretary for the past five years and is known as a tough, competent administrator.

The next few months will be critical for Leung and Lam, with Chinese President Xi Jinping expected to pay a visit on July 1 to celebrate the 20th anniversary of Hong Kong’s handover, with large protests expected.

Part of the public mistrust towards Lam stems from her close working relationship with the staunchly pro-Beijing Leung, who protesters say ordered the firing of tear gas at them in 2014.

“She has been elected pretty much solely on the support of Beijing,” said political scientist Ma Ngok.

“If that’s the case, she might have a lot of debts that she has to repay to her supporters in Beijing.”

When Lam on Monday toured neighbourhoods to thank the public – who had no votes in her appointment – one elderly man wagged a finger at her and urged her to “serve Hong Kong people, not mainland China”, according to Cable TV footage.

Student activist Joshua Wong, 20, one of the leaders of the 2014 protests, said Lam’s appointment was a “nightmare” for Hong Kong.

“Theoretically, the chief executive is a bridge between the central government and the Hong Kong people,” he said. “But Lam will be a tilted bridge. She will only tell us what Beijing wants and won’t reflect what the people want to the communist regime.”

(Reuters)