Experts blame protests, pandemic for spike in complaints of cyberbullying, online harassment
- Victims suffer online abuse, threats and obscenities as netizens attack political rivals
- Cyberbullying cases rise as Hongkongers spend more time online during pandemic

Dee* goes online regularly to write about everything from video games to current affairs, encouraged by the response of hundreds of followers.
But when he went to his social media page recently, after posting his views on Hong Kong’s new national security law, he was shocked by the torrent of abuse, threats and obscenities that greeted him.
The Hongkonger, a clerk in his late 20s, had written that he supported the law tailor-made by Beijing for Hong Kong and passed on June 30, and criticised anti-government protesters for vandalising public property and bullying those who disagreed with them.
“It was hurtful to see so many messages saying ‘Get out of Hong Kong’, ‘Do not call yourself a Hongkonger’ and worse,” he says. “I became paranoid.”
Dee knew that cyberbullying was on the rise, especially cases of doxxing that targeted police and politicians whose personal information was dug up and made public, but never imagined he would become a target himself.
More Hongkongers say they are the victims of online harassment, intimidation, defamation and other attacks.