The Asian Age

HK PROTEST LEADER LOSES TEACHING JOB

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Hong Kong, July 29: A professor and leading figure in Hong Kong’s political opposition has been fired from his university job following China’s passage of a sweeping new national security law.

Hong Kong University’s council voted to oust Benny Tai from his position as an associate law professor in an 18-2 vote on Tuesday, local media reported. Tai has been out on bail since being sentenced to 16 months in prison in April 2019 as one of nine leaders put on trial for their part in a 2014 drive for universal suffrage known as the Umbrella Movement.

In a Facebook post on Wednesday, Tai said he intended to continue writing and lecturing on legal issues and asked for public support. “If we continue in our persistenc­e, we will definitely see the revival of the rule of law in Hong Kong one day,” Tai wrote. While the 2014 movement failed in its bid to expand democracy in the semi-autonomous Chinese city, protests returned last year following the local government’s proposal of legislatio­n that would have seen criminal suspects extradited to face trial in mainland China.

Opponents called that a violation of Hong Kong’s independen­t legal system it was guaranteed after being handed over from British to Chinese rule in 1997. Although the legislatio­n was eventually shelved, the protesters’ demands expanded to include calls for democratic changes and an investigat­ion into alleged police abuses, growing increasing­ly violent over the second half of the year. That prompted Beijing to pass the national security law.

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