Five years after the implementation of Beijing’s national security law (NSL), many pro-democracy political parties, trade unions, professional groups, and civic organizations have disbanded in Hong Kong.
In August 2021, the 48-year-old Professional Teachers’ Union announced its dissolution. The organization had been the largest teachers union in Hong Kong until then.
In September 2021, the prisoner rights organization Wall-fare, founded by former Legislative Council member Shiu Ka-chun, announced its closure after operating for nine months. At that time, Hong Kong Secretary for Security Chris Tang Ping-keung said that there were people in prison who had joined forces with people outside to “establish a power base and endanger national security.”
In October 2021, the 31-year-old Hong Kong Confederation of Trade Unions officially disbanded. Following the implementation of the NSL, the group was accused by Chinese state media of being a “foreign agent.” The union’s former chairman, Lee Cheuk-yan, has been remanded in custody over a case involving the Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Patriotic Democratic Movements of China.
Warning to the Democratic Party
The Democratic Party was founded in 1994 and was once the largest pro-democracy party in the Hong Kong Legislature.At that time, Hong Kong media outlets reported that the party had received “suggestions” to dissolve from a number of other groups, including “messengers” with official backgrounds in the Chinese Communist Party (CCP).
On April 13, the Democratic Party held a special general meeting of all members and agreed to authorize the dissolution with an overwhelming majority. Lo declined to comment on allegations that some members of the party had received warnings that if they did not dissolve, they would face serious consequences.
League of Social Democrats Disbanded
On June 29, 2025, the 19-year-old League of Social Democrats held a press conference to announce its disbandment. The group emphasized that its members would continue to advocate for their beliefs in various fields in Hong Kong.When asked what the pressure for dissolution was and when the idea of dissolution was instigated, league Chairman Chan Po-ying only replied that what could be said had been said and that there was no way to further elaborate on the reasons.
After the dissolution of the league, Hong Kong’s pro-democracy parties have been completely suppressed by the CCP. Although the Hong Kong Association for Democracy and People’s Livelihood has not been dissolved, it has held almost no activities in recent years. It is also not able to obtain any seats in the Legislative Council or District Council under the new electoral system.
Former Chinese human rights lawyer Wu Shaoping told The Epoch Times that the root cause behind the disbanding of the league and other pro-democracy groups “lies in the Chinese Communist Party’s intolerance of freedom and democracy in Hong Kong.”
He said the destruction of all these civil society organizations “marks the end of freedom in Hong Kong and signifies that the CCP has achieved its political goal of dismantling the city.”
Wu added that Hong Kong has fallen into silence, which will further deepen political corruption and drag the city under a CCP-induced reign of terror.
However, he believes that Hong Kong citizens can still passively resist harmful policies and spread the truth.






