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Albert Ho

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Albert Ho Chun-yan
何俊仁
Albert Ho in 2018
Chairman of the Democratic Party
In office
17 December 2006 – 10 September 2012
Preceded byLee Wing-tat
Succeeded byEmily Lau
Chairman of the Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Patriotic Democratic Movements of China
In office
15 December 2014 – 8 December 2019
DeputyRichard Tsoi
Mak Hoi-wah
Chow Hang-tung
Preceded byLee Cheuk-yan
Succeeded byLee Cheuk-yan
Member of the Legislative Council
In office
11 October 1995 – 30 June 1997
Preceded byNew constituency
Succeeded byReplaced by Provisional Legislative Council
ConstituencyNew Territories West
In office
1 July 1998 – 30 September 2012
Preceded byNew parliament
Succeeded byKwok Ka-ki
ConstituencyNew Territories West
In office
1 October 2012 – 30 September 2016
Preceded byNew constituency
Succeeded byRoy Kwong
ConstituencyDistrict Council (Second)
Personal details
Born (1951-12-01) 1 December 1951 (age 72)
British Hong Kong
Political partyHong Kong Affairs Society (1985–90)
United Democrats (1990–94)
Democratic Party (since 1994)
SpouseTang Suk-yee
Alma materUniversity of Hong Kong
OccupationSolicitor
Albert Ho Chun-yan
Chinese何俊仁
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinHé Jùnrén
Yue: Cantonese
Yale RomanizationHòh Jeun Yàhn
JyutpingHo4 Zeon3 Jan4

Albert Ho Chun-yan (Chinese: 何俊仁; born 1 December 1951) is a solicitor and politician in Hong Kong. He is the former chairman (2014–2019) and vice-chair (2019–2021) of the Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Patriotic Democratic Movements of China,[1][2] and former chairman of the Democratic Party from 2006 to 2012. He is a solicitor and a former member of the Legislative Council of Hong Kong for District Council (Second) constituency.

Early life and education

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Ho was born in what was then British Hong Kong on 1 December 1951 in a big family with six children. His father worked in a shipping company by day and as a translator by night, along with two other jobs that he had.[3] Ho got his Bachelor of Laws with honors in the University of Hong Kong in 1974, and obtained a Postgraduate Certificate in Laws in 1975.[4]

He attended lectures given by Hsu Kwan-san, a Chinese historian who later became a professor at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, whom Ho cited as influence for his political beliefs and Chinese national sentiment. During his college life, he developed his liberal ideals, got actively involved in student politics and campaigned for Mak Hoi-wah who ran for the Hong Kong University Students' Union against the Maoist nationalists who dominated the student union in the 1970s.

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Ho got admission to practice law in 1977 and was appointed a notary public of the common law in 1988. He was employed for Messrs. C.Y. Kwan & Co. as a solicitor for nearly 20 years, then left to set up his own law firm, Ho, Tse, Wai & Partners. His litigation experience varied from banking cases and commercial law to land law and matrimonial disputes, as well as in criminal and medical negligence cases. Albert Ho worked a number of human rights cases on a pro bono (undertaken voluntarily and without payment) for the pan-democracy camp.[4]

Ho stepped into politics when he was first appointed to the Kowloon City District Board from 1982 to 1983.[4] In 1985 he co-founded the Hong Kong Affairs Society (HKAS) to participate in the electoral politics during the transition period. During his spell as the leader of the HKAS, he demanded a faster pace of democratisation in Hong Kong and the safeguarding of freedom and way of life after the handover of Hong Kong to Mainland China after 1997. In 1989, he co-founded the Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Patriotic Democratic Movements of China to support the Tiananmen protests of 1989 and was critical of the Beijing government's bloody crackdown. He became the third chairman of the Alliance since 2014, succeeding Lee Cheuk-yan.

He ran for the Urban Council in Kowloon City West in the 1986 municipal election but was defeated by incumbent Peter Chan Chi-kwan. He ran again in the 1991 Urban Council election in Southern District but was again losing to incumbent Joseph Chan Yuet-sut of the conservative Liberal Democratic Federation of Hong Kong. He was elected to the Regional Council in the municipal elections in 1995, receiving the largest number of votes in the Regional Council.[4] He kept served on the council through 1997 until it was abolished by Chief Executive Tung Chee-hwa in 2000.

Ho was a member of the Tuen Mun District Council for Lok Tsui since the 1999 District Council election. He was targeted by the radical democrats, including Albert Chan of the People Power in the 2011 District Council election who opposed the Democrats' compromise with the Beijing officials on the 2012 constitutional reform proposals and in the 2015 District Council election by Civic Passion's Cheng Chung-tai. He kept the seat for 15 years but was defeated in 2015 by pro-Beijing lawyer Junius Ho in 2015 by a narrow margin of 277 votes.

Legislative Councillor

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In April 1990, Ho and other pro-democracy activists co-founded the United Democrats of Hong Kong (UDHK), the first major pro-democracy party in the city, of which he became the founding vice-chairman. The party transformed into today's Democratic Party in 1994 when he became a member of the party's first executive committee. In 1992, he ran for the by-election in New Territories West as his first attempt to the Legislative Council after incumbent Democrat Ng Ming-yum died of cancer. He was defeated by conservative rural leader Tang Siu-tong by only four percent of the votes. He ran again in New Territories West in 1995 Legislative Council election, receiving 54 percent of the popular vote.

He stepped down from the colonial legislature on 30 June 1997 on the eve of the handover of Hong Kong after the Beijing government dismantled the "through train" agreement of allowing the 1995 elected legislature to transition beyond 1997. The Democratic Party boycotted the Provisional Legislative Council controlled by Beijing and refused to take part in it. In November 1997, Ho was nominated by the Democratic Party to run for a seat in the National People's Congress, but excluded from competition when he failed to obtain the minimum number of nominations from the 400-strong Beijing-appointed election conference.[4]

In the first Legislative Council election of the SAR period in 1998, Ho won a seat in the New Territories West with his party colleague Lee Wing-tat. With his strong basis in his strategic district Tuen Mun, he was re-elected in 2000 with one of the three Democratic Party tickets. Albert Chan who had a strong basis in Tsuen Wan was also elected at the expense of Lee Wing-tat. Ho was re-elected in 2004. After the election, he unsuccessfully challenged Rita Fan in the Legco presidential election.

On 20 August 2006, Ho was assaulted by three unidentified men using baseball bats and a baton[5] in a McDonald's restaurant in Central, Hong Kong, after he had attended a protest against the government's plan to adopt a Goods and Services Tax. He suffered injuries to his head, arm and face, including a broken nose.[6]

Democratic Party Chairman

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Between 2004 and 2006 Ho was the vice-chairman of the Democratic Party. In December 2006, he was elected as party chairman in the leadership election, defeating Chan King-ming of the reformist faction. During his tenure, the party absorbed Emily Lau's The Frontier in 2008.

In June 2010, he led the Democratic Party delegation to the Liaison Office to negotiate the electoral reform package with the representatives of the Beijing government. The Beijing government eventually accepted the Democratic Party's modified proposal to allow five new directly elected District Council (Second) seats.[7] The compromise sparked extreme discontent among the radical democrats and created a major unrest among the pan-democracy camp. He was challenged by radical democrat legislator Albert Chan in his Lok Tsui constituency in the following 2011 District Council election and barely retained his seat.

In the 2012 Legislative Council election, Ho ran in the newly created District Council (Second) constituency and was elected with 228,840 votes. However, his party continued being attacked by the radical democrats and received the worst result in history, retaining only six seats. Ho resigned as party chairman right after the election results came out and was replaced by Emily Lau as acting chairwoman.

2012 Chief Executive bid

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Albert Ho announced on 4 October 2011 that he would stand in the 2012 Chief Executive election, which is elected in a small-circle election dominated by pro-Beijing members.[8] Having won the pan-democratic primary against Frederick Fung of the ADLP on 8 January 2012,[9] Ho ran against the two pro-Beijing candidates, ex-convenor of the Executive Council Leung Chun-ying and former Chief Secretary Henry Tang. Out of the 1,132 EC votes, Ho came third with only 76; Leung Chun-ying was elected with 689 votes.[10]

Snowden incident

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In 2013, Ho grabbed international headlines after it was revealed that he had assisted Edward Snowden during the latter's stay in Hong Kong.[11]

2014 Hong Kong protests

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In October 2014, during pro-democracy protests that began on 26 September, Ho said he was prepared to take a bullet if demonstrations turned violent. He did not support violence in the cause of democracy, but was willing to make a "sacrifice" on behalf of young people "because the future belongs to them."[12]

Post-legislator development

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2019–20 Hong Kong protests

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Albert Ho at the Hong Kong anti-extradition bill protests on 9 June 2019

Albert Ho continued to support the pro-democracy movement, and took part in the Hong Kong anti-extradition bill protests.[13] On 18 April 2020, Ho was one of 15 Hong Kong high-profile democracy figures arrested on suspicion of organizing, publicizing or taking part in several unauthorized assemblies between August and October 2019 in the course of the anti-extradition bill protests.[14][15] In May 2021, he was sentenced to two jail terms of 18 months each, to be served concurrently, for inciting and organizing a banned protest on China's National Day on 1 October 2019.[16]

Ho was attacked by a group of men armed with metal rods at around 7pm on 19 September 2019 as he exited Tin Hau MTR station. He was followed by a black-clad group and beaten.[17] Soon thereafter, several politicians from the pro-democracy camp – notably Roy Kwong, Stanley Ho Wai-hang of the Labour Party and Leung Kai-Qing were also attacked in the street. The involvement of organised crime was suspected by the Hong Kong Police Force.[18][19]

On 21 August 2019, Ho was named by Chinese state media as one of the "Gang of Four who bring ruin to Hong Kong" alongside Apple Daily owner Jimmy Lai, Democratic Party founding chairman Martin Lee and former Chief Secretary Anson Chan.[20]

Imposition of national security law

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Soon after the June 2020 imposition of the Hong Kong national security law by the PRC Standing Committee of the National People's Congress, Ho told The Daily Telegraph that he feared that "people like him" may face "difficulties in the times to come" as global banks like Credit Suisse, HSBC, Julius Baer and UBS were in the process of "broadening scrutiny" to "screen clients for political and government ties" and subjecting pro-democrats to "additional diligence requirements". Said Ho: "There’s not much you can do, actually, unless you cease all your financial and banking activities in Hong Kong."[21]

Resignation from civic groups and sentencing

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In September 2021, Ho resigned from his leadership positions within the Hong Kong Alliance, the China Human Rights Lawyers Concern Group, and the New School for Democracy.[22] The Alliance had come under heavy attack by authorities at that time, with two national security investigations underway against it and its lead members; earlier that month, before his resignations, Ho had pleaded guilty to taking part in or inciting others to participate in the 2020 Tiananmen Massacre vigil. Ho said in court, to applauding spectators, that he and eleven others who pleaded guilty for the same offence were "on the right side of history".[2] Ho was sentenced on 15 September 2021 to a total of 10 months in prison after having been found guilty of the participation and incitement charges relating to the 2020 vigil.[23] A first bail application by Ho over a charge of subversion of state power in relation to his role in the Hong Kong Alliance was rejected on 20 July 2022,[24] but a second one was granted on 22 August 2022.[25]

Arrest

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On 21 March 2023, Ho was arrested after being released on bail in August last year in order to receive treatment for lung cancer. The bail was granted on the condition that it would be revoked if he reportedly committed any acts that endangered national security.[26] On 12 April 2024 Albert Ho (then aged 72) received from the Hong Kong Court of Final Appeal a suspended sentence following conviction for taking part in an unauthorised procession in August 2019.[27] The decision generated considerable adverse publicity for Lord Neuberger (former President of the UK Supreme Court) for his participation in the judicial panel.[28]

References

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  1. ^ "全年工作及財務報告". Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Patriotic Democratic Movements of China. Archived from the original on 28 June 2020. Retrieved 5 July 2020.
  2. ^ a b Chau, Candice (9 September 2021). "12 Hong Kong democrats plead guilty over banned 2020 Tiananmen Massacre vigil". Hong Kong Free Press. Retrieved 14 September 2021.
  3. ^ Leung, Jan (16 September 2010). "Albert Ho Chun-yan". HK Magazine. Archived from the original on 5 February 2016.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  4. ^ a b c d e "Albert Ho Chun-yan".
  5. ^ "Baseball bat attack on MP at democracy rally". Archived from the original on 13 March 2007. Retrieved 21 August 2006.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link), The Scotsman, 20 August 2006
  6. ^ "Assailant thumps lawmaker and shoves banana in his face". South China Morning Post. 26 October 2008. Retrieved 24 January 2022.
  7. ^ Cheung, Gary (25 June 2010). "Cheers and jeers for political reform vote". South China Morning Post. Retrieved 24 January 2022.
  8. ^ (in Chinese)何俊仁擬選特首 搞全民投票 Oriental Daily. 5 October 2011.
  9. ^ Lee, Diana. (13 December 2011). Pan-democrat camp ready for next fight Archived 8 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine The Standard.
  10. ^ Kaiman, Jonathan (25 March 2012). "Thousands protest pick for Hong Kong executive post". Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on 25 March 2012.
  11. ^ Lam, Lana (24 June 2013). "Hong Kong lawyer Albert Ho says 'middleman' urged Snowden to leave". South China Morning Post.
  12. ^ Ed Flanagan & Alastair Jamieson (2 October 2014). "Hong Kong's Albert Ho: I Will Take A Bullet For Democracy ". NBC News.
  13. ^ 申华; 谭嘉琪 (9 June 2019). "抗议港府修订逃犯条例 香港爆发近空前规模大游行". Voice of America, Chinese (in Chinese). Retrieved 13 June 2019.
  14. ^ Yu, Elaine; Ramzy, Austin (18 April 2020). "Amid Pandemic, Hong Kong Arrests Major Pro-Democracy Figures". The New York Times. Retrieved 18 April 2020.
  15. ^ Wong, Rachel (18 April 2020). "15 Hong Kong pro-democracy figures arrested in latest police round up". Hong Kong Free Press. Retrieved 18 April 2020.
  16. ^ Ho, Kelly (28 May 2021). "Jail terms for Hong Kong democrats over banned 2019 China National Day demo". Hong Kong Free Press. Retrieved 14 September 2021.
  17. ^ Cheng, Kris (19 November 2019). "Former Hong Kong lawmaker Albert Ho attacked". Hong Kong Free Press HKFP. Retrieved 19 November 2019.
  18. ^ 鄭榕笛 (19 November 2019). "【何俊仁遇襲】民主派:兇徒尾隨至橫街施襲 明顯有組織犯事". 香港01 (in Chinese (Hong Kong)). Retrieved 19 November 2019.
  19. ^ "Attack on second pan-dem". The Standard (Hong Kong), The Standard Newspapers Publishing Ltd. 30 September 2019.
  20. ^ Gan, Nectar; Sum, Lok-kei (20 August 2019). "Chinese state media labels Hong Kong pro-democracy figures 'new Gang of Four' in fresh attacks". South China Morning Post. Retrieved 21 August 2023.
  21. ^ "Global banks scrutinise their Hong Kong clients for pro-democracy ties". Telegraph Media Group Limited. 20 July 2020.
  22. ^ Kwan, Rhoda (13 September 2021). "Security law: Hong Kong pro-democracy heavyweight Albert Ho resigns from civil society groups amid probe". Hong Kong Free Press. Retrieved 15 September 2021.
  23. ^ Chau, Candice (15 September 2021). "Top Hong Kong democrats sentenced over banned 2020 Tiananmen Massacre vigil". Hong Kong Free Press. Retrieved 21 July 2022.
  24. ^ Li, Almond (20 July 2022). "Hong Kong veteran democrat Albert Ho denied bail again over Tiananmen vigil group case". Hong Kong Free Press. Retrieved 22 August 2022.
  25. ^ Chau, Candice (22 August 2022). "Ex-leader of Hong Kong Tiananmen vigil group Albert Ho granted bail in national security case". Hong Kong Free Press. Retrieved 22 August 2022.
  26. ^ "Hong Kong police put bailed pro-democracy leader Albert Ho back under arrest". The Guardian. 21 March 2023. Retrieved 21 March 2023.
  27. ^ https://www.reuters.com/world/china/hong-kong-court-dismisses-bid-by-media-tycoon-jimmy-lai-overturn-conviction-2024-08-12/ [bare URL]
  28. ^ The Times Leader 13 August 2024 under the title “Poor Judgment.”
Party political offices
New political party Vice Chairperson of United Democrats of Hong Kong
1990–1994
With: Yeung Sum
Merged into Democratic Party
Preceded by Vice Chairperson of Democratic Party
1999–2000
With: Yeung Sum
Succeeded by
Preceded by Vice Chairperson of Democratic Party
2002–2006
With: Lee Wing-tat (2002–2004)
Chan King-ming (2004–2006)
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chairperson of Democratic Party
2006–2012
Succeeded by
Legislative Council of Hong Kong
Preceded by Member of Legislative Council
Representative for New Territories West
1995–1997
Replaced by Provisional Legislative Council
New parliament Member of Legislative Council
Representative for New Territories West
1998–2012
Succeeded by
New constituency Member of Legislative Council
Representative for District Council (Second)
2012–2016
Succeeded by
Preceded by Senior Member in Legislative Council
2008–2016
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by Member of Tuen Mun District Council
Representative for Lok Tsui
2000–2015
Succeeded by
Non-profit organization positions
Preceded by Chairman of the Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Patriotic Democratic Movements of China
2014–2019
Succeeded by