
Death of Hong Kong student in mainland China unrelated to school tour: minister
A government investigation into the death of a Hong Kong teenager on an exchange trip to mainland China has found the tragedy was unrelated to his school tour, according to the education chief.
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Secretary for Education Christine Choi Yuk-lin was responding on Sunday after weeks of concern and online petitions demanding transparency from the school.
The death of the St Paul's College student during the trip to Hangzhou in Zhejiang province sparked widespread discussion, with some calling for disclosure of details and the adoption of measures to prevent any recurrence of such a tragedy.
When Choi was asked at an event whether her bureau would explain the matter further, she said: 'The investigation has concluded and has proven that [his death] was unrelated to exchange activity.'
St Paul's College confirmed on March 1 one of its Form Five students died during the trip, and turned the cover photo for its Facebook page black as a sign of mourning.
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Multiple media outlets reported the student died by apparent suicide on February 28, but neither the bureau nor the school have disclosed the cause or date of his death, nor his age.
An alumni petition, which has gained significant traction online, demanded the school handle the matter 'responsibly and transparently'. It also requested a reply on calls that measures be adopted to prevent similar incidents.

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HKFP
4 days ago
- HKFP
2 arrested, 10 taken away by Hong Kong police on Tiananmen crackdown anniversary
Hong Kong police have said they arrested two people and took away 10 others on Wednesday, the 36th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square crackdown – the youngest being a 15-year-old. In Wan Chai and Eastern District, five men and five women aged between 15 and 69 were taken to police stations for investigation on suspicion of breaching the peace, police said in an emailed statement shortly after midnight on Thursday. Another two people were arrested in Central and Causeway Bay after they were found 'behaving suspiciously,' the force also said. HKFP saw several people being taken away on police vans on Wednesday evening, including activist Lui Yuk-lin and performance artist Chan Mei-tung in Causeway Bay, near Victoria Park, the venue where Hong Kong's annual Tiananmen vigils were once held. In the park, a man holding an electric candle, a man standing silently in the rain, and two women, including a girl holding flowers and dressed in a school uniform, were also taken into police vehicles. Pro-democracy activists intercepted Members of the pro-democracy League of Social Democrats (LSD) were intercepted on their way to Causeway Bay, according to the party's social media posts. The LSD said that its chair, Chan Po-ying, brought yellow paper flowers to mourn the victims of the Tiananmen Square crackdown on Wednesday. She was surrounded by more than 20 plainclothes officers when she got off the bus at the Sogo department store at around 7pm. When asked to surrender the flowers, she refused to do so. Chan was taken to Wan Chai Police Station in a police vehicle and released at around 9pm. Yu Wai-pan, internal vice-chair of the LSD, was also intercepted at East Point Road on his way to Victoria Park. He was taken to the same police station and released at 11pm. Hundreds of police officers – both in uniform and plainclothes – were deployed in Causeway Bay on Wednesday evening, stationed in the MTR station, outside the Sogo department store, as well as in and around Victoria Park. According to the police statement, three of the 10 people taken away were detained for investigation, while the remaining seven were allowed to leave. One of the two people arrested was a 26-year-old mainland Chinese woman who allegedly failed to produce proof of identity on Garden Road in Central. She was taken to the police station for further investigation and subsequently allowed to leave. The other was a 24-year-old local man whom police approached near Hing Fat Street in Causeway Bay in the evening. The man was 'emotionally agitated and refused to cooperate,' the police statement said. 'He was arrested on suspicion of 'obstructing police officers in the performance of their duties' and is currently being detained for investigation.' Authorities banned the Tiananmen vigil gathering at Victoria Park for the first time in 2020, citing Covid-19 restrictions, and imposed the ban again in 2021, nearly a year after a national security law imposed by Beijing came into effect. The vigil organiser – the Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Patriotic Democratic Movements of China – voted a year later to disband after its former leaders Lee Cheuk-yan, Albert Ho, and Chow Hang-tung were charged with incitement to subversion under the national security law.


HKFP
5 days ago
- HKFP
In Pictures: Hong Kong police deploy armoured vehicle in Causeway Bay on Tiananmen crackdown anniversary
Police have deployed an armoured vehicle in Hong Kong's commercial heart, amidst an ongoing heavy security presence on the 36th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square crackdown. The 'Sabertooth' armoured vehicle was spotted on Great George Street in Causeway Bay on Wednesday afternoon, as groups of uniformed officers patrolled areas near Victoria Park, the former site of annual vigils commemorating the 1989 Tiananmen crackdown in Beijing. Hundreds of police officers have also been deployed in Causeway Bay. Officers – both in uniform and plainclothes – are being stationed in the Causeway Bay MTR station, outside the Sogo department store, as well as in and around Victoria Park. Andrew Kan, deputy police commissioner for national security, made an appearance in Causeway Bay at around 5.05pm and walked around for about 10 minutes. Activist Lui Yuk-lin, nicknamed 'Female Long Hair,' was brought into a police van at 4.28pm, shortly after she exited the Causeway Bay MTR station. She clasped her palms in front of her chest without saying anything. It is unclear whether she was under arrest. In Victoria Park, a man holding an electric candle while sitting on a bench was surrounded by police officers at around 4.30pm. The man, wearing a face mask, a white cap, and dressed in black attire, was later brought to a police van. Police did not say whether he was apprehended. Shortly after 6pm, a woman holding up a small white flower on Great George Street was surrounded by police. They searched her belongings and escorted her away to the MTR station. Two women – including a girl holding flowers and wearing what appeared to be a school uniform – were taken into a police van in Victoria Park. Performance artist Chan Mei-tung appeared in Causeway Bay at around 7.15pm and told reporters that she was going to Victoria Park to swim. She was stopped by police as she was approaching the park in the rain and was taken away in a police van at 7.29pm. On Tuesday, Chan was stopped and searched by plainclothes officers outside Sogo, as she was chewing bubble gum. The Tiananmen crackdown occurred on June 4, 1989, ending months of student-led demonstrations in China. It is estimated that hundreds, perhaps thousands, died when the People's Liberation Army cracked down on protesters in Beijing. Keith Yip, deputy police commissioner of operations, appeared in Victoria Park at around 7.45pm. A man stood silently in the rain at around 8pm. Minutes later, he was escorted by police and taken into a police van. Louis Doucet, head of press and communications at the French Consulate General in Hong Kong, walked through Victoria Park at around 8.20pm. Around 20 minutes later in the park, police questioned a man wearing a white T-shirt featuring a drawing of the Goddess of Democracy and a Chinese slogan saying, 'Vindication of June 4 Comes Closer and Closer,' before taking him into a police van. At around 9 pm, a man wearing a T-shirt saying 'Core Values of Socialism' was taken away by police in Victoria Park. Police did not say whether he was under arrest. He was also taken away during last year's Tiananmen crackdown anniversary. Just before 9 pm, a man wearing a headpiece that read 'Hong Kong Add Oil' in Chinese was stopped by police at the entrance of Fashion Walk in Causeway Bay and later led into a police van. His dog had on a collared decorated with yellow ribbons and the Chinese word for 'persist.' Two female journalists – one working for Yahoo News and the other for local media outlet The Collective – said they were questioned by police after filming an officer shining a flashlight at reporters outside the H&M store on Great George Street. Speaking to the press after being released at around 9pm, the two journalists said they told the police they were reporters. The officers then took down their personal details and press credentials before letting them go. Hong Kong used to be the only place on Chinese soil – besides Macau – where commemoration of the crackdown could be held in public. Tens of thousands of residents gathered annually in Victoria Park in Causeway Bay for candlelight vigils on June 4 every year to mourn the victims. But authorities banned the Tiananmen vigil gathering at Victoria Park for the first time in 2020, citing Covid-19 restrictions, and imposed the ban again in 2021, nearly a year after a national security law imposed by Beijing came into effect. The vigil organiser – Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Patriotic Democratic Movements of China – voted a year later to disband after its former leaders Lee Cheuk-yan, Albert Ho, and Chow Hang-tung were charged with incitement to subversion under the national security law. Chow, who is currently detained pending trial, announced on Sunday that she would launch a 36-hour hunger strike in prison on Wednesday to mark 36 years since the crackdown took place. 'I believe we all will have our own ways to remember the day,' read the post shared by Chow's Patreon account, which is managed by the activist's family and friends. The police set up anti-crash barriers outside the Sogo department store after a blue private vehicle drove onto the pedestrian road. The driver was taken away by the police, and the car was towed. Local media outlet The Collective reported on Wednesday that some police officers were dropped off from a Government Flying Services helicopter at Lion Rock, where banners and signs commemorating the Tiananmen crackdown appeared in previous years. The officers set up camp near the mountaintop, the report read. In an email reply to HKFP's enquiries, the police force said: 'Police will not disclose specific operational details as it may affect the effectiveness of Police's operations.' AsOne Store, a pro-democracy business run by former district councillor Derek Chu in Mong Kok, is distributing commemorative digital candles for free on Wednesday to mark the anniversary of the Tiananmen crackdown. Some candles are wrapped with labels that read 'Tiananmen Mothers,' referring to a group of parents who say their children died during the 1989 crackdown and have since advocated for Beijing to stop treating discussions of the event as taboo. Chu told HKFP on Wednesday afternoon that more than 20 people had gone to the store to get the candles. AsOne also sells candles from another pro-democracy store, Heung Together, which was inspected by Hong Kong customs officers on Tuesday, the eve of the Tiananmen anniversary. 'It is really depressing every day in Hong Kong when you dare not speak up. But on June 4, I see that there are still many people who stand firm in their beliefs. I can still feel the spirit of those who want to safeguard the truth,' Chu said. It is the third consecutive year that the store has displayed candles to commemorate the historic event, after the annual candlelight vigils in Victoria Park were snuffed out. The Tiananmen crackdown occurred on June 4, 1989, ending months of student-led demonstrations in China. It is estimated that hundreds, perhaps thousands, died when the People's Liberation Army cracked down on protesters in Beijing.


HKFP
5 days ago
- HKFP
Ex-district councillor's candle shop inspected by Hong Kong customs officers on eve of Tiananmen anniversary
Hong Kong customs officers inspected ex-district councillor Katrina Chan's incense shop for hours on the eve of the Tiananmen crackdown anniversary, accusing her of failing to comply with product safety regulations. Two plainclothes officers, who later introduced themselves as Customs and Excise Department (C&ED) personnel, visited Chan's shop, Heung Together, in Dragon Centre in Sham Shui Po with three other customs officers on Tuesday evening. The plainclothes officers bought products from the shop twice within the span of 20 minutes on Tuesday evening. They told her she was suspected of violating the Consumer Goods Safety Regulation because she had failed to include bilingual safety labels on products. Inspections of the products lasted more than four hours, from 7.30pm to around 11.40pm, after the mall had already closed. The officers photographed and seized some of the products Chan was selling but did not arrest her. Candles for $6.4 Chan, who served as Tsuen Wan district councillor from 2019 to 2021, sold soy wax candles for '$6.4' on Tuesday, one day before June 4, the anniversary of the 1989 Tiananmen crackdown. A customs officer at the scene said that Tuesday's operation was part of a routine inspection. When asked if the team had inspected other shops at Dragon Centre on the same day, he said he could not reveal operational details. At least five other plainclothes officers, who a customs officer said were not part of the department's team, stood in the vicinity of the shop, regularly rotating positions. Just before midnight, two of the officers identified themselves as police officers to Chan, saying they were at the scene to observe the customs officers and that they did not know the other unidentified men in plainclothes. Throughout the inspections, Chan said the presence of the unidentified men left her feeling uneasy. When reporters on the scene began recording the exchange between Chan and the two police officers, the officers asked them to stop, saying it was a 'private conversation.' HKFP has reached out to the C&ED and the police force for comment. Chan said last month that she was being 'silenced' after being ousted from her job and a theatre production she was part of. In May last year, she and five others were arrested under the city's homegrown security law, also known as Article 23. Their arrests were linked to a Facebook page called 'Chow Hang-tung Club,' named after the activist who was the vice chairperson of the Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Patriotic Democratic Movements of China. The Alliance once organised the city's annual Tiananmen vigils until Hong Kong police banned the Tiananmen vigil gathering at Victoria Park for the first time in 2020, citing Covid-19 restrictions. The ban was imposed again in 2021, nearly a year after a national security law imposed by Beijing came into effect. The Tiananmen crackdown occurred on June 4, 1989, ending months of student-led demonstrations in China. It is estimated that hundreds, perhaps thousands, died when the People's Liberation Army cracked down on protesters in Beijing.