Yes. We have some threats being made against [Technical difficulty--Editor] and also [Technical difficulty--Editor] humanitarian crisis in Hong Kong.
Recently, a Toronto Star article featured an individual who faced that death threats and reported it to the RCMP, and no action was taken.
These are very real harassment and intimidation tactics, but there are also intimidation tactics that are a little more subtle. For example, if someone went to a protest, their boss would ask them why they went to the protest, saying that if they went again, the boss might have to fire them.
It's not necessarily the boss being a Chinese state agent, but they're afraid that, in association, their employee who chose to side with Hong Kongers might anger Beijing and might threaten their business relations.
That is why I said that it is not safe for them at work and in civil societies, in academia and so many various sectors, because this kind of harassment and intimidation happens not only through explicit threats but also implicit and lateral surveillance and policing.