The frontman of a popular Taiwanese metal band which advocates independence for the island was denied a visa to Hong Kong because he lacked “special skills,” a music festival organizer said yesterday.
ChthoniC, one of Asia’s most successful black metal bands, slammed the decision as “ridiculous” after they were forced to pull out of a music festival over the weekend because band members were unable to get a visa from Hong Kong’s immigration department.
Frontman Freddy Lim is also a pro-independence lawmaker in Taiwan and the cancellation fuelled fears about eroding artistic freedoms in Hong Kong as authorities clamp down on pro-democracy sentiment at the behest of Beijing.
Read more: Hong Kong denies visa renewal for journalist who chaired pro-independence talk
Hong Kong’s immigration authorities have yet to say why the visas were refused.
But on Monday Denise Ho, a pro-democracy canto-pop star who had invited ChthoniC to perform at a festival, posted a letter from the immigration department setting out the reasons for Lim’s refusal.
“A person seeking to enter into Hong Kong … for employment should amongst other things, possess a special skill, knowledge or experience of value to and not readily available in the (city),” the letter stated.
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