Father of US-Based Activist Is Sentenced Under National Security Law in Hong Kong
Hong Kong Democracy Council Executive Director Anna Kwok testifies during a hearing before the U.S. House Select Committee on Strategic Competition between the United States and the Chinese Communist Party at Cannon House Office Building in Washington on Dec. 13, 2023. Alex Wong/Getty Images
A Hong Kong court on Feb. 24 sentenced the father of a U.S.-based pro-democracy activist to eight months in prison for a national security offense, in a case that has sparked fresh criticism of the Chinese regime’s transnational repression.
Kwok’s daughter, Anna Kwok, left Hong Kong in 2020 and currently works as the executive director of the Hong Kong Democracy Council, a Washington-based human rights group.
The elder Kwok has been accused of attempting to terminate an insurance policy held in his daughter’s name and withdraw funds worth about $11,000.
Acting principal magistrate Cheng Lim-chi stated that the aim of convicting the elder Kwok was to prevent anyone from handling the financial assets owned or controlled by “an absconder,” thereby achieving the goal of punishing the absconder, according to a court document released on Feb. 26.
Cheng described the nature of Kwok Yin-sang’s actions as “serious.” The judge stated that although the elder Kwok did not directly endanger national security, his actions could have increased the likelihood that his daughter would not return to Hong Kong to face trial, according to the court document.
Shortly after Cheng handed down the sentence against her father, the younger Kwok issued a statement on social media saying that the insurance policy was never in her name.
She was neither the owner nor the policyholder and had never exercised any control over the policy in question, according to the statement.
“My father was convicted and sentenced under the guise of ‘national security,’” she said. “In truth, this is guilt by blood, this is hostage taking, this is transnational repression.”
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Kwok Yin-sang (L) leaves the High Court after a judge granted him bail in Hong Kong on May 20, 2025. Tommy Wang/AFP via Getty Images
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It added that the sentence marks a “significant escalation” of the Chinese regime’s transnational repression campaign.
Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.) called the sentencing of the 69-year-old Kwok “cruel,” saying in a statement it was “the latest act of the Chinese government reaching across borders to silence dissent, wherever it appears.”
The senator said Kwok was put through “a sham trial“ through a Hong Kong court acting on the Chinese regime’s behalf because his daughter ”spoke out against Beijing’s abuse of the basic rights” of Hongkongers.


