Margaret Ng

Hong Kong politician From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Margaret Ng Ngoi-yee[1] (Chinese: 吳靄儀; born 25 January 1948) is a politician, barrister, writer and columnist in Hong Kong. She was a member of the Legislative Council of Hong Kong from 1995 to 2012.

Preceded byNew parliament
Succeeded byDennis Kwok
ConstituencyLegal
Preceded bySimon Ip
Quick facts Member of the Legislative Council of Hong Kong, Preceded by ...
Margaret Ng Ngoi-yee
吳靄儀
Member of the Legislative Council of Hong Kong
In office
1 July 1998  30 September 2012
Preceded byNew parliament
Succeeded byDennis Kwok
ConstituencyLegal
In office
11 October 1995  30 June 1997
Preceded bySimon Ip
Succeeded byReplaced by Provisional Legislative Council
ConstituencyLegal
Personal details
Born (1948-01-25) 25 January 1948 (age 78)
PartyCivic Party (2006-2024)
EducationTai Po Government Primary School
St Paul's Convent School
Alma materUniversity of Hong Kong (BA, MA, P.C.LL.)
University of Cambridge (BA)
Boston University (PhD)
OccupationBarrister
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Quick facts Traditional Chinese, Simplified Chinese ...
Margaret Ng
Traditional Chinese吳靄儀
Simplified Chinese吴霭仪
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinWú Ǎiyí
Yue: Cantonese
Yale RomanizationǸgh Ói yìh
JyutpingNg4 Oi2 ji4
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Biography

Before entering the legal profession, Margaret Ng worked at the University of Hong Kong and Chase Manhattan Bank (now JP Morgan Chase). She also held senior positions in journalism, serving as publisher and deputy editor-in-chief of the Ming Pao newspaper; and as a columnist for South China Morning Post.

Besides being a lawyer and journalist, Ng is also an accomplished expert in the fields of philosophy and literature. She has written several volumes of critical studies on the wuxia novels of Jin Yong and earned her Doctor of Philosophy degree from Boston University.

She appeared in a BBC documentary, The Last Governor, which followed Chris Patten and the last years of British rule in Hong Kong.

Like many politicians from the Pan-democrat camp, Ng is denied entry into the Mainland. On 12 September 1999, she was barred travel there to attend a conference on China's constitution.[2]

She was a former director at Stand News and a former Civic Party lawmaker at Legislative Council of Hong Kong.[3]

Arrests

On 18 April 2020, Ng was arrested as one of 15 Hong Kong high-profile democracy figures, on suspicion of organizing, publicizing or taking part in several unauthorized assemblies between August and October 2019 in the course of the anti-extradition bill protests. Following protocol, the police statement did not disclose the names of the accused.[4][5] On 16 April 2021, she was sentenced to 12 months' imprisonment suspended for 24 months.[6] On 12 April 2024, Ng received from the Hong Kong Court of Final Appeal a suspended sentence following conviction for taking part in an unauthorised procession in August 2019.[7] The decision generated considerable adverse publicity for Lord Neuberger (former President of the UK Supreme Court) for his participation in the decision.[8]

On 29 December 2021, Ng and six other people linked to Stand News were arrested on suspicion of breaching a colonial-era law covering conspiracy to print or distribute seditious materials that were supposedly published at the pro-democracy outlet. She was released on bail next day together with the five of the detained.[9][3][10]

Academic history

See also

References

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