
Court finds father of exiled pro-democracy campaigner guilty of handling a fugitive’s assets, marking a rare prosecution of a relative under strict security legislation
A Hong Kong court has convicted the father of a US-based pro-democracy activist under the territory’s national security law for unlawfully dealing with his daughter’s insurance policy, in one of the most prominent prosecutions of a family member of an exiled dissident.
Kwok Yin-sang, aged sixty-eight and the father of Anna Kwok, was found guilty of handling property belonging to an “absconder” — a legal term used after authorities designated her daughter under the Safeguarding National Security Ordinance — by accessing or attempting to access insurance funds in her name following her departure from Hong Kong.
The charge, brought under section ninety of the ordinance, reflects authorities’ broad interpretation of the law’s provisions on dealings with the assets of individuals accused of undermining national security.
Kwok’s prosecution marks the first time that relatives of an overseas activist wanted on national security grounds have been charged under the sweeping legislation.
The court heard that after meeting his daughter overseas, Kwok returned to Hong Kong and made attempts to withdraw funds from her life and accident insurance policies, which prosecutors characterised as indirectly assisting a fugitive.
During earlier proceedings, he pleaded not guilty, and his case has drawn attention to how the national security law extends beyond direct political action to financial and familial connections.
Human rights organisations have criticised the conviction as part of a broader pattern of legal pressure on relatives of dissidents, warning that targeting family members could be a form of collective punishment that undermines international legal norms.
The sentencing also underscores the expansive reach of Hong Kong’s national security framework, which in recent years has been used to pursue activists, journalists and other critics of the city’s governance.
Supporters of Kwok have called for international scrutiny and urged authorities to consider the humanitarian implications of applying national security provisions in cases involving financial arrangements.
Kwok Yin-sang, aged sixty-eight and the father of Anna Kwok, was found guilty of handling property belonging to an “absconder” — a legal term used after authorities designated her daughter under the Safeguarding National Security Ordinance — by accessing or attempting to access insurance funds in her name following her departure from Hong Kong.
The charge, brought under section ninety of the ordinance, reflects authorities’ broad interpretation of the law’s provisions on dealings with the assets of individuals accused of undermining national security.
Kwok’s prosecution marks the first time that relatives of an overseas activist wanted on national security grounds have been charged under the sweeping legislation.
The court heard that after meeting his daughter overseas, Kwok returned to Hong Kong and made attempts to withdraw funds from her life and accident insurance policies, which prosecutors characterised as indirectly assisting a fugitive.
During earlier proceedings, he pleaded not guilty, and his case has drawn attention to how the national security law extends beyond direct political action to financial and familial connections.
Human rights organisations have criticised the conviction as part of a broader pattern of legal pressure on relatives of dissidents, warning that targeting family members could be a form of collective punishment that undermines international legal norms.
The sentencing also underscores the expansive reach of Hong Kong’s national security framework, which in recent years has been used to pursue activists, journalists and other critics of the city’s governance.
Supporters of Kwok have called for international scrutiny and urged authorities to consider the humanitarian implications of applying national security provisions in cases involving financial arrangements.



































