Veteran unionist Yeung Kwong, ringleader in 1967 Hong Kong riots, dies at 89
Veteran unionist dedicated his life to the labour movement and received the city's highest honour from Tung Chee-hwa government in 2001
A veteran unionist and ringleader of the 1967 deadly leftist riots who controversially received the city's highest honour died yesterday at the age of 89.
Yeung Kwong, a former leader of the city's largest Beijing-loyalist labour union, the Federation of Trade Unions, died in the morning at Prince of Wales Hospital in Sha Tin, the federation said. It was understood he underwent a heart operation last year.
Born in 1926, Yeung joined the Tramways Workers Union in 1948 and led strikes by Hongkong Tramways' fare conductors the following year.
He served as FTU chairman from 1962 to 1980, and then its president between 1980 and 1988. From 1973 to 1987, he was a local deputy to the National People's Congress.
Yeung's unionist career was marked by the 1967 riots, during which he served as director of the Anti-British Struggle Committee.