Stamping out dissent in Hong Kong

Published: Dec. 5, 2020, noon

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In Hong Kong,the authorities are showing that they mean business with the new security law to stamp out demonstrations and dissent. The pro-democracy media tycoon Jimmy Lai has been detained, and young campaigners including protest leader Joshua Wong were sentenced to prison this week. Before that, the pro-democracy opposition resigned en masse, as Danny Vincent reports.\\nSeventeen weeks after the presidential election that is widely thought to have been rigged and that led to Belarus's largest-ever anti-government protests, President Alexander Lukashenko still refuses to step down. But he has lost the support of some of his police officers, a few of whom have fled to Poland. Lucy Ash meets one of them.\\nAraucania in southern Chile is a land of ancient volcanoes, virgin forests and agriculture. But recently it has been making headlines for arson attacks on timber lorries and prisoners on hunger strike. This is the homeland of one of Chile\\u2019s main indigenous peoples \\u2013 the Mapuche. They want their land back that was taken from them not by early colonisers but by General Pinochet, as Jane Chambers found out.\\nIn Australia there has been a new impetus to look at past injustices this year, as elsewhere. And these include a little-known practice akin to the slave trade. In what is known as \\u201cblack-birding\\u201d, islanders from the South Pacific were brought to work in Australia against their will, as Will Higginbotham reports.\\nAcross Europe, coronavirus lockdowns and restrictions have shut opera houses, theatres and concert halls. Despite receiving large government grants and loans, the performing arts are now facing a critical period in countries like Italy, France, Germany and Austria, says Joanna Robertson.

Presenter: Kate Adie\\nProducer: Arlene Gregorius

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