Joshua Wong is easily the most recognizable Hong Kong pro-democracy activist, not least because of a Netflix documentary lionizing him as the "Teenager vs. Superpower" for his role in 2014 protests.
So his arrest today along with other opposition figures quickly reverberated around the world. It's a sign the Hong Kong government is stepping up efforts to quash demonstrations that have rocked the city for nearly three months.
But for Hong Kong authorities -- and their overseers in Beijing -- the arrests won't do much to stop the demonstrations. Wong now plays at best a peripheral role in a largely leaderless movement fueled by anonymous users on discussion platforms like Telegram and LIHKG, a forum like Reddit.
Perhaps a more important development was the cancellation of a march planned for tomorrow in central Hong Kong after police denied a permit. Already there is chatter online about a push to go "shopping" there instead, code for an unauthorized gathering, Many of those have turned violent in recent weeks.
And that's the real problem for Hong Kong, and China: Protesters no longer need identifiable leaders like Wong.
– Daniel Ten Kate
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