The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Till prison we part’: HK crackdown pushes veteran activists to wed

- Su Xinqi

HONG KONG: Both veteran Marxists who have spent decades campaignin­g for Hong Kong democracy, Chan Po-ying and Leung Kwok-hung viewed marriage as something of a patriarcha­l and unnecessar­y institutio­n.

But when China’s crackdown on Hong Kong dissidents came for Leung, 63, they finally tied the knot.

The couple have been together for 45 years and are two of the most prominent faces on Hong Kong’s left, campaignin­g first against colonial Britain and then China’s increasing­ly authoritar­ian rule.

Over the years Leung — better known by his sobriquet “Long Hair” — has been in and out of prison on short sentences for his activism.

Last week he was among a group of dissidents sentenced to 18 months for organising an “unlawful protest”.

But it was the sudden imposition last year of a sweeping national security law — which carries up to life in prison — that finally pushed them to wed.

“We never thought we needed to get married until long-term imprisonme­nt came right in our faces,” Chan, 63, told AFP from the office of the League of Social Democrats (LSD), a leftist opposition party she and Leung helped found in 2006.

“It was the national security law that propelled us to make up our mind,” she added.

‘More than a wife’

As a married couple, the pair would have greater prison and court visitation rights should one of them be detained long term, they reasoned.

National security police came for Leung in early January.

He was among dozens of opposition figures arrested on charges of “subversion” for organising an unofficial primary last year to decide who will run in local elections.

Chan and Leung wed soon after but spent just 40 days together as newlyweds.

Leung was officially charged with subversion alongside 46 others, most of whom have been denied bail.

Since then Chan has spent her days shuffling between detention centres, the courts and their office.

As an activist with her own long history of campaignin­g, she balks at being known as “Long Hair’s wife”.

“I think I am more than that,” she said.

Born into a middle-class Hong Kong family, Chan abandoned a potentiall­y comfortabl­e life to pursue opposition politics, founding grassroots feminist organisati­ons and working in garment factories to make ends meet.

But she feels a sense of responsibi­lity to continue advocating for Leung and others like him.

“As a family member who can sit through all his trials I think I have the more privileged position to speak up about his cases and the impact of the national security law,” she said.

‘Drawn into a vortex’

The security law is part of a double-edged sword that Beijing has used to quash dissent in Hong Kong since the city was convulsed by months of huge and often violent democracy protests in 2019.

The other side is a campaign dubbed “patriots ruling Hong Kong” where critics of Beijing are being weeded out by political vetting and public office bans.

With so many opposition figures arrested or fled overseas, Chan is one of the few female politician­s still on the front lines.

She was a constant presence at the mammoth — and mostly unsuccessf­ul — bail hearings for those charged with national security crimes.

Recently she staged a small protest when a Beijing official came to Hong Kong.

“I would have done the same even if Long Hair hadn’t been arrested because it is what I believe,” Chan said.

“I can’t sway you now but I will demonstrat­e my resistance,” she said of her philosophy towards Beijing.

But Chan knows Hong Kong’s democracy movement is on the back foot.

The protests of 2019 saw swathes of Hong Kong’s population hit the streets calling for greater democracy and police accountabi­lity.

Officials are now busy rewriting that narrative, portraying the popular movement as an attempt by a small hardcore of subversive­s to try and topple China itself.

Chan admits sometimes feeling despondent.

“It’s unpreceden­ted for Hong Kong, the whole of society seems to be clueless about what to do next,” she said.

She says she has no idea whether the LSD can even survive.

There are two upcoming dates that are usually big moments for opposition groups to hold protests and vigils: June 4 and July 1.

The former commemorat­es China’s deadly 1989 crackdown against pro-democracy students in Beijing’s Tiananmen Square.

The latter marks Hong Kong’s handover to China — a day when opposition groups traditiona­lly hold democracy marches.

Chan is unsure whether either will go ahead this year — or in any other future year.

“We have been drawn into a vortex that’s swirling us into dizziness,” she said.

We never thought we needed to get married until longterm imprisonme­nt came right in our faces.

Chan Po-ying

 ?? — AFP photos ?? This file picture taken on April 30, 2008 shows then councillor and political activist Leung (left - in white t-shirt) standing next to fellow activist and future wife Chan (centre) as they hold up a banner with human rights slogans, outside the ‘Receiving Celebratio­n’ for the Olympic flame in Hong Kong ahead of the 2008 Beijing Summer Olympic Games.
— AFP photos This file picture taken on April 30, 2008 shows then councillor and political activist Leung (left - in white t-shirt) standing next to fellow activist and future wife Chan (centre) as they hold up a banner with human rights slogans, outside the ‘Receiving Celebratio­n’ for the Olympic flame in Hong Kong ahead of the 2008 Beijing Summer Olympic Games.
 ??  ?? Chan takes an undergroun­d metro train to the West Kowloon Court to attend the case of her husband Leung, in Hong Kong.
Chan takes an undergroun­d metro train to the West Kowloon Court to attend the case of her husband Leung, in Hong Kong.
 ??  ?? Chan sitting at the desk of her husband in their Hong Kong office.
Chan sitting at the desk of her husband in their Hong Kong office.

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