Post Magazine

Fugitive Hong Kong activist Nathan Law granted political asylum in Britain

In a post on his Facebook page on Wednesday night, he said the Home Office had deemed him a refugee under the Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees and he would be offered asylum.

Law said the application required several interviews over four months. To make his case that he had fled persecution at home, he pointed to politically motivated lawsuits and the scope of the national security law.

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He expressed concern that other activists who had fled to Britain might not be granted the same status because of a lack of media attention or their having fled before the persecution.

"I hope that my case can help the Home Office understand more about the complicated situation in Hong Kong. To free more protesters from Beijing's authoritarian oppression, the Home Office could consider more comprehensive evidence when coping with Hong Kong cases," he wrote.

The former student leader previously said he chose to stay in Britain because he hoped to "sound an alarm to remind" the country and Europe of the dangers the Communist Party posed to the values of democracy.

Law fled Hong Kong in late June last year, days before Beijing imposed the security law, which has been heavily criticised by Britain and other Western nations. London claimed the law constituted a breach of the 1984 Sino-British Joint Declaration, which laid out the terms of the city's handover in 1997.

While police have not made public a list of wanted dissidents, sources have identified Law as one of the people who had fled overseas and were wanted on suspicion of breaking the security law, which bans acts of secession, subversion, terrorism and collusion with foreign forces.

In a previous newspaper article, Law said: "I decided to flee to where I could speak freely. I am the first former lawmaker in Hong Kong, and the youngest elected in history, to live a life of exile."

This article originally appeared on the South China Morning Post (SCMP).

Copyright (c) 2021. South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.

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