Headlines
  • The memorandum of understanding, which implements a 60-day ceasefire in the Iran War, was electronically signed by the United States and Iran.
  • The tentative agreement between the United States and Iran, which aims to put an end to the war between the two countries, garnered backing from G7 leaders.
  • On Wednesday, the 14-point memorandum of understanding was made public by the Trump administration.
  • Under a 14-point memorandum of understanding, the United States is expected to lift sanctions against Iran and unfreeze money and assets connected to the country's government.
  • A targeted shooting at a Delaware hospital claimed the life of a 19-year-old man and seriously injured another.

More Details

Former Hong Kong Journalist in ‘Just the Right Llace’ to Take BNO Exit Option

Chow Man-chung speaks about his new life in exile after his family fled an ongoing crackdown on dissent.

By Lu Xi and Raymond Chung

Journalist Chow Man-chung, who has settled in Britain under a visa scheme allowing millions of Hongkongers to emigrate to the country amid China’s crackdown on freedom of speech, in an undated photo during a jog at the Thames River near London-Photo Courtesy:Chow Man-chung via RFA

One year after the U.K. launched a visa scheme allowing millions of Hongkongers and their families to emigrate to the country amid Beijing’ ongoing crackdown on freedom of speech and political activism, tens of thousands have already made the move, many of them hoping for a better life for their children.

The scheme saw nearly 90,000 applicants in its first eight months, with long lines at airport check-ins and tearful scenes of farewell showing just how many were willing to start over, rather than tolerate life under the national security law, with no meaningful vote, and with ruling Chinese Communist Party (CCP) propaganda increasingly finding its way into their children’s education.

Under the scheme, holders of the British National Overseas (BNO) passport, once derided as a useful wedge for a wobbly table or a doorstop, are allowed to live and work in the U.K., with a pathway for eventual citizenship.

Journalist Chow Man-chung, 46, says he had doubts as soon as the new law was imposed on Hong Kong by the CCP.

“When I heard that the common law presumption of innocence would be reversed under the national security law, something I had known since childhood, I wondered if it was still going to be safe for me [in Hong Kong],” Chow told RFA.

“I thought it would have a negative impact on my kid’s development, and on how he sees the world, if there were so many red lines [forbidden topics],” he said. “I thought that would be very unhealthy.”

Chow said the danger was that even adults were at risk of becoming passive in the face of CCP propaganda or injustice, and “anesthetizing themselves.”

Chow said his elderly mother had also told him to take the kids overseas, despite the fact that she plans to stay on in Hong Kong.

“I had to use words the kids were able to understand when I explained to them why we were going to live somewhere else, because I had to prepare them psychologically to not see the kids and relatives they had grown up with for a while,” he said.

Roller-coaster ride

Emotionally, the transition has been a roller-coaster ride, but politically, Chow said, he was past the point of no return.

Shortly before they left Hong Kong, photos of the Chow family waiting patiently outside a cordoned-off Victoria Park on the anniversary of the 1989 Tiananmen massacre made Hong Kong media reports. Chow has the photo on the cover of a carefully crafted photo album carrying the family’s most cherished memories of their home city.

For Chow, the pain of parting from friends, and from his home, is still raw.

“The plane took off to the northeast that day, turned around Disneyland, then banked across the south of Lamma Island, then turned around and headed north, as if you we were going on a last tour of the city,” he said, his voice choked with emotion at the memory.

What awaited the family was a culture shock, not least because they could no longer afford to pay someone to help out in the home, and Chow taking care of daily tasks including school run, housework and homework supervision.

While driving, he would listen to Hong Kong radio stations to remind him of home, including music by homegrown rockers the Rubber Band.

Chow doesn’t expect his kids to share his intense sense of nostalgia or exile from Hong Kong, but he hopes they will understand, as they adapt to their new lives in Kingston, southwest London.

“I think there is a large number of Hongkongers here — sometimes when you ask a question [on group chat] and get a lot of responses, you don’t feel so alone,” he said.

“We may feel that we just fell through a black hole, that … we are to be pitied, that there is so much we don’t know … but there are a lot of other people just like you,” Chow said.

One in five want to emigrate

Chow has continued with his activism in London, printed fliers for a recent protest against Hong Kong’s vanishing press freedom. Many of his colleagues have been arrested under the national security law, or made unemployed as one after another pro-democracy media outlets relocates or folds.

He described the BNO visa scheme as a “small window” in time and space.

“That window was so small, and we were in just the right place to be able to walk through it towards the light, towards the exit,” Chow said.

A poll by the Hong Kong Democratic Party in December 2021 found that 58 percent of people are unhappy living in the city now, and 22 percent are planning to emigrate.

On the democratic island of Taiwan, an official report said it had also received more than 2,000 calls to its one-stop immigration service for Hongkongers hoping to relocate to Taiwan amid the national security crackdown.

Enquiries were relating mostly to investment visas, routes to settlement, spousal visas, employement and schooling, but mostly routes to long-term settlement, the Mainland Affairs Council (MAC) said in a recent report on the status of Hong Kong.


Translated and edited by Luisetta Mudie.

Copyright © 1998-2020, RFA. Used with the permission of Radio Free Asia, 2025 M St. NW, Suite 300, Washington DC 20036. https://www.rfa.org

Australian Koolies

Australian Koolies are midium sized Australian herding dog breed.They have well-muscled bodies and are powerful, nimble dogs.
Read More

UN Security Council Meets on Women and Peace and Security

Shama Obaed Islam, State Minister for Foreign Affairs of Bangladesh, addresses the United Nations Security Council meeting on “Peace is decided with women: emerging from conflict by enhancing their participation” under agenda item Women and peace and security.
Read More

Continental Bulldog

The Continental Bulldog is a brand-new breed developed in Switzerland by crossing the Leavitt Bulldog with the English Bulldog.
Read More

Drive by Download Attacks

Malicious programs that install on consumers’ devices without their permission are explicitly referred to as “drive by download” attacks.Any user device running any operating system can experience it.
Read More

Related Article

Satellite Images Suggest North Korea is…

North Korea is expanding shipyards in two key port cities, satellite imagery analyzed by Radio Free ...
June 18, 2026

Uyghur Human Rights Activist Condemns Death…

A Bangkok court on Thursday sentenced two Uyghur men to death for triggering a bomb explosion which ...
June 12, 2026

Dalai Lama Undergoes Left Knee Surgery…

The Dalai Lama has undergone surgery on his left knee on Monday, his personal physician confirmed.In ...
June 9, 2026

No Vigils: Hong Kong’s Victoria Park…

Hong Kong’s Victoria Park is now much quieter on the anniversary of the Tiananmen Square Massacre, ...
June 4, 2026

Exclusive: Tiananmen Victims’ Families Banned from…

Days before the 37th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square massacre, several relatives of victims of ...
June 3, 2026

Quad’s Fiji Port Plan Will Challenge…

A plan by the United States, Japan, India and Australia to collaboratively invest in port infrastruc ...
May 30, 2026

Other Article

Pet Corner

Australian Koolies

Australian Koolies are midium sized Australian herding dog breed.They have well-muscled bodies and a ...
June 18, 2026
Prevent Cyber Crime

AI-Powered Email Protection

Phishing, malware, and BEC threats are prevented by AI-powered email protection before they reach us ...
News & Views

Satellite Images Suggest North Korea is…

North Korea is expanding shipyards in two key port cities, satellite imagery analyzed by Radio Free ...
Pick of the Day

UN Security Council Meets on Women…

Shama Obaed Islam, State Minister for Foreign Affairs of Bangladesh, addresses the United Nations Se ...
Bizzare News

Driver Trapped Inside Car When Deer…

On June 9 night, a deer fell from a New Jersey overpass, hitting a car and trapping a woman inside.A ...
June 17, 2026
Pet Corner

Continental Bulldog

The Continental Bulldog is a brand-new breed developed in Switzerland by crossing the Leavitt Bulldo ...

Top