Australia grants asylum to Hong Kong pro-democracy activist
Hui said on Saturday he had received written notice from the Australian Department of Home Affairs approving his claim, and that his wife, children and parents had also been granted visas.
'When people around me say 'congratulations' to me, although I politely thank them, I can't help but feel sad in my heart. How to congratulate a political refugee who misses his hometown?' he wrote.
'If it weren't for political persecution, I would never have thought of living in a foreign land. Immigrants can always return to their hometowns to visit relatives at any time. Exiles have no home.'
The Home Affairs Department did not immediately respond to emailed questions sent after business hours. The Hong Kong government and China's Foreign Ministry did not immediately respond to questions about the decision.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese visited Beijing last month as part of his administration's years-long push to improve ties with China.
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A former Democratic Party politician, Hui left Hong Kong in late 2020 after facing criminal charges over the 2019 pro-democracy protests that escalated when the city's pro-mainland chief executive, Carrie Lam, tried to rush through a new extradition law, which effectively meant anyone could be sent to the mainland for anything that offended the Chinese Communist Party.
In May, Hui told this masthead he had been left in 'a dangerous situation'.
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