Hong Kong’s Lingnan University terminates 2 professors who previously criticised government
- One professor had just written a piece about opposition participation in the coming legislative election, and the other was linked to a fund offering assistance to protesters
- ‘The timing of the dismissal is suggestive. I was also told that the university is doing it for risk management,’ says adjunct professor Law Wing-sang
A Lingnan University academic known for his social commentary and for joining a class boycott during the 2014 Occupy movement said on Friday that he had been terminated, with no reason given.
The adjunct professor of cultural studies, Law Wing-sang, confirmed he was sacked on Friday, a day after the university said his employment there had ended in September, without elaborating on the nature of his departure or the reasons behind it.
The university did not elaborate on Hui’s case either, saying it did not “disclose employment details of individual staff out of respect for their privacy”.
In an interview with the Post on Friday, Law described his termination as “sudden” and “bizarre”.
“It came without reason, as though that is acceptable. I cannot think of a precedent for such a dismissal in Hong Kong,” he said.
Law said he received a letter from the school terminating his contract three or four days after he penned an article for the Chinese-language newspaper Ming Pao in which he wrote, under a pseudonym, about the recent political controversy over whether opposition candidates should stand in the coming Legislative Council election following a Beijing-decreed political overhaul.
“The timing of the dismissal is suggestive. I was also told that the university is doing it for risk management. But what risks can I bring? If I am in breach of the national security law, the national security police would have arrested me already,” Law said.