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Hong Kong Cancels Passports of Activists Based in US, Australia

A copy of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR) passport arranged in Hong Kong, China, on Saturday, Jan. 30, 2021. Prime Minister Boris Johnson estimates about 300,000 Hong Kong citizens will take advantage of a new visa route to leave the former British colony and settle in the U.K., despite nearly three million people being eligible. Photographer: Paul Yeung/Bloomberg (Paul Yeung/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- The Hong Kong government canceled the passports of seven overseas-based activists under the new national security law and banned the handling of funds related to these individuals.

The government put out a notice on Tuesday, listing seven people as absconders who have fled to the US and Australia over charges related to national security. Among them are former lawmakers Ted Hui and Dennis Kwok, as well as activists Kevin Yam, Kwok Fung-yee, Elmer Yuan, Frances Hui and Joey Siu. 

The latest measures are part of an ongoing crackdown on dissent, and carried out under the new powers granted by Hong Kong’s homegrown national security law enacted earlier this year. Known as Article 23, the law gives authorities the right to cancel the passports of wanted individuals living overseas.

Authorities also used the new legislation to ban anyone from funding, renting, buying or selling property to, or having joint ventures with the seven people. So far, no one has been arrested for funding the individuals. 

“If offenders voluntarily cease their criminal activities and provide information that leads to the arrest of others, their own offenses may be dealt with more leniently,” Kan Kai-yan, deputy commissioner of police (national security), said at a briefing. 

The government suspended the law practice qualifications of Kwok and Yam, according to the notice. Kwok is a partner at the New York-based law firm Elliott Kwok Levine Jaroslaw Neils LLP, while Yam is a PhD student at the Melbourne Law School after returning to Australia in 2022. 

Businessman Elmer Yuan has been ordered to be temporarily removed as director of seven companies. He is the father-in-law of pro-Beijing politician Eunice Yung. Two years ago, Yung took out a newspaper ad to announce that she was severing ties with Yuan after he was accused of subversion.

On Tuesday, the government added six more individuals to the wanted list, offering a HK$1 million ($128,725) bounty for each, and accusing them of harming the interests of the people of Hong Kong. 

The people include scholar and public opinion pollster Chung Kim-wah, and former singer and actor Joseph Tay, who runs a radio station in Canada and intends to stand in an upcoming local election. 

--With assistance from Alan Wong.

(Updates with additional details from third paragraph)

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