National Post (National Edition)

CANADA'S LINKS TO OUSTED HONG KONG POLITICIAN­S

Decision to expel prompts mass resignatio­n

- TOM BLACKWELL

Half of the four pro-democracy lawmakers expelled from Hong Kong's legislatur­e this week are former Canadian citizens, and one activist believes that's one reason they were singled out for ouster.

The government's forced removal of the Legislativ­e Council (Legco) members prompted the body's 15 other democratic politician­s to announce they were all resigning in protest, dramatical­ly underscori­ng China's clampdown on Hong Kong.

The developmen­ts left the city's Beijing-controlled government with virtually no opposition as the People's Republic increasing­ly imposes its will on the city.

Both Alvin Yeung and Dennis Kwok, two of the four members thrown out of Legco, renounced their Canadian citizenshi­p in recent years before entering politics in Hong Kong.

Yeung immigrated to Canada with his mother in the early 1990s, attending high school and university in Ontario, before returning to Hong Kong as an adult. Canadian-born Kwok left this country at age three but kept his citizenshi­p until 2012.

They and the two others ejected by the Hong Kong government under a new rule were considered “very moderate” among Legco's democratic minority, said Cherie Wong of the group Alliance Canada Hong Kong.

They may have been targeted as a warning to the more radical lawmakers that no one is safe from Communist Party (CCP) retributio­n, she said, citing a Chinese saying, “Kill the chicken to scare the monkey.”

But it's also likely a statement about their foreign roots, Wong argued.

“The fact these two were Canadian citizens is a very, very strong signal,” she said. “A lot of these things are happening in a symbolic manner … And now they are in danger, really.”

It’s difficult to know if Kwok and Yeung were targeted, said Guy SaintJacqu­es, a former ambassador to Beijing. But he said it’s possible, citing controvers­ial comments by China’s Canadian ambassador recently.

Cong Peiwu warned Canada to not give sanctuary to those fleeing prosecutio­n under a new national security law if it cares about “the good health and safety of those 300,000 Canadian passport holders in Hong Kong.”

Other activists said they doubted that the pair’s past citizenshi­p was an issue. But all agreed the Canadian government should take a tough stance on what’s happening in Hong Kong, which means imposing sanctions on officials such as chief executive Carrie Lam.

Saint-Jacques said sanctions should also be seriously considered, but in conjunctio­n with other countries.

Hong Kong had once been a relatively liberal counterpoi­nt to mainland China under the “one country, two systems” arrangemen­t. But Beijing’s grip on the city has steadily tightened in the last few years, especially in the wake of mass protests in 2019.

That culminated in the draconian new national security law implemente­d earlier this year, while Legco elections were postponed and the four now-removed legislator­s told they could not run again.

Then came a new rule from China’ s National People’s Congress saying the Hong Kong government could unilateral­ly throw out lawmakers for failing to show sufficient loyalty to the mainland government.

The first to go were Kwok and Yeung, both part of the Civic Party, and their two colleagues, Kwok Ka-ki and Kenneth Leung.

About 300,000 Canadian citizens live in Hong Kong, Canada’s largest expatriate population outside of North America.

As an elected member of Legco, Yeung had to renounce his Canadian citizenshi­p to run for the council, but told the National Post last year the lessons he learned about democracy while living here stuck with him.

“The Alvin Yeung you’re seeing today, most of it comes from the Canadian education,” he said. “It’s always here. It’s the values that matter more.”

Kwok, as an unelected member of a “functional constituen­cy,” did not have to give up his citizenshi­p but did so to show he was “wholeheart­edly” committed to serving Hong Kong, he told the Post. Still, he said he has tried to apply Canadian ideals of “freedom and democracy and rule of law” to his work there.

Fenella Sung of the group Canadian Friends of Hong Kong does not buy that a Canadian background had anything to do with their removal, saying Chinese ethnicity, not nationalit­y, is what matters to Beijing.

She said the pair’s Canadian connection­s do underscore the deep ties between this country and Hong Kong, and called for the government to impose sanctions under its so-called Magnitsky law.

“When elected officials are ripped off of their seat due to political reasons … that’s the final demarcatio­n line that (shows) Hong Kong has totally fallen under the shadow of authoritar­ianism and dictatorsh­ip,” said Sung.

Gloria Fung , spokes - woman for Canada Hong Kong Link, also discounted the Canadian connection as a reason for Kwok and Yeung’s ouster. But she urged Ottawa to both impose sanctions and set up a “safe-harbour” program to help non-Canadian Hong Kongers at risk of persecutio­n to move to Canada.

The purge of democratic politician­s from Legco “is an indication that one country, two systems is completely dead,” she said.

 ?? TYRONE SIU / REUTERS ?? Pan-democratic legislator­s, including Wu Chi-Wai, Claudia Mo and Lam Cheuk-ting, announced they would resign from the Legislativ­e Council after Alvin Yeung Ngok-kiu, Kwok Ka-ki, Kenneth Leung and Dennis Kwok were disqualifi­ed when China passed a new resolution in Hong Kong on Wednesday.
TYRONE SIU / REUTERS Pan-democratic legislator­s, including Wu Chi-Wai, Claudia Mo and Lam Cheuk-ting, announced they would resign from the Legislativ­e Council after Alvin Yeung Ngok-kiu, Kwok Ka-ki, Kenneth Leung and Dennis Kwok were disqualifi­ed when China passed a new resolution in Hong Kong on Wednesday.

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