Hong Kong’s national security police detained a prominent pro-democracy activist on Thursday in the first reported arrest under the security law in about 10 months, according to local media reports.
(Bloomberg) — Hong Kong’s national security police detained a prominent pro-democracy activist on Thursday in the first reported arrest under the security law in about 10 months, according to local media reports.
Elizabeth Tang was arrested for allegations of colluding with foreign forces, media including the South China Morning Post reported. Tang, who is married to jailed activist Lee Cheuk-yan, was arrested outside Stanley Prison after visiting her husband, according to reports.
Tang was chief executive of the Hong Kong Confederation of Trade Unions, the city’s largest pro-democracy labor organization, from 1995 to 2011, according to her LinkedIn profile. Like many other such groups, the HKCTU disbanded in 2021 in the wake of the national security law. Tang is currently general secretary of the International Domestic Workers Federation.
The arrest is the first known detention for a national security offense since May 11, when four prominent democracy activists, including a senior member of the Catholic church, were held. It’s also the first since John Lee became the city’s leader in July.
A police spokesperson didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.
Tang recently returned to Hong Kong after moving to the UK in September 2021, the Standard reported. Her husband, who was chairman of a group that organized the annual Tiananmen Square vigil, has been charged with subversion under the national security law. He is in jail for his role in unauthorized protests during 2019 and 2020. Lee founded the HKCTU in 1990.
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