A former Hong Kong district councillor arrested under the city’s homegrown security law last May has said she is being “silenced” after being ousted from her job and a theatre production she was part of.

Katrina Chan
Ex-district councillor Katrina Chan. Photo: Katrina Chan, via Facebook.

Katrina Chan, a former Tsuen Wan district councillor, wrote in a Facebook post on Monday that “beneath the harmony and ‘business as usual,’ people’s voices are being erased and silenced.”

She described two incidents that happened within 24 hours.

In the first incident, an actor taking part in a play opening in two weeks was told to quit after a government department, which the production rented the venue from, checked the name list, she wrote. If they did not quit, the department could refuse the rental on the basis that it might breach an ordinance.

In another incident, a teacher lost their job after an anonymous complaint letter was sent to the workplace.

article 23 national security law draft
A draft of Hong Kong’s homegrown national security law. Photo: Hillary Leung/HKFP.

Chan told HKFP on Tuesday that the two incidents happened to her on Friday.

The former district councillor made the post almost a year after she and five others were arrested under Article 23, the city’s homegrown national security law, last May.

Their arrests were linked to a Facebook page called “Chow Hang-tung Club,” named after the activist who was vice-president of the Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Patriotic Democratic Movements of China, a group that organised Tiananmen vigils.

None of those arrested have been charged.

In her social media post, Chan said the things that happened to her may be brushed off as “isolated incidents” – “wording that is most commonly used by those in power.”

Leisure and Cultural Services Department LCSD
The Leisure and Cultural Services Department logo. Photo: Hillary Leung/HKFP.

“By reducing everything to the person, the broader effects on the public and society are obscured,” she wrote in Chinese. “The root of the problem lies in the system and structural shifts, not individual cases.”

According to local media outlet The Collective, Chan was scheduled to perform in a play at Tsuen Wan Town Hall this week.

In response to HKFP, the Leisure and Cultural Services Department (LCSD) said: “All bookings of LCSD venues are processed in accordance with the established booking procedures and the terms and conditions of hire. We will not comment on any individual bookings.”

The Tsuen Wan Town Hall’s conditions of use for renting facilities state that hirers and those admitted to facilities must abide by the Beijing-imposed national security law.

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Hillary Leung is a journalist at Hong Kong Free Press, where she reports on local politics and social issues, and assists with editing. Since joining in late 2021, she has covered the Covid-19 pandemic, political court cases including the 47 democrats national security trial, and challenges faced by minority communities.

Born and raised in Hong Kong, Hillary completed her undergraduate degree in journalism and sociology at the University of Hong Kong. She worked at TIME Magazine in 2019, where she wrote about Asia and overnight US news before turning her focus to the protests that began that summer. At Coconuts Hong Kong, she covered general news and wrote features, including about a Black Lives Matter march that drew controversy amid the local pro-democracy movement and two sisters who were born to a domestic worker and lived undocumented for 30 years in Hong Kong.