Simon Cheng: Hongkonger who was held in mainland China optimistic he can stay in Britain
- The former British consulate worker claimed he was tortured during his detention in August on his way back to Hong Kong after a business trip
- He tells rally in London his case could help other Hongkongers with British National (Overseas) passports gain British citizenship
Cheng, 28, said he was “optimistic” about the prospect of being able to stay in Britain when he addressed a protest in support of dissidents in Hong Kong and Xinjiang outside the Chinese embassy in London on Sunday.
“I am waiting for the details of the protection arrangement to be ready, hopefully by June,” Cheng said when asked about the British government’s progress. Cheng has so far been staying in London on a working holiday visa.
“My case would be iconic given my status as a holder of the British National (Overseas) passport,” Cheng said. “It could pave the way for more similar passport holders to find a way to come to the UK [permanently].”
Holders of the BN(O) passport – permanent residents of Hong Kong who registered before the 1997 handover of the city to Chinese rule – have the right to land in Britain and enjoy a six-month stay as a visitor, but do not have full citizenship.
What is a BN(O) passport and what is a holder entitled to?
Cheng refused to go into details of his immigration arrangement, to be hammered out with the British government, saying only that he would hold a press conference as soon as it was clearer.
Mainland authorities have said that Cheng was held for 15 days for “solicitation of prostitution”.
But Cheng said he was “shackled, blindfolded and hooded” by officers in Shenzhen for having shown support for Hong Kong’s pro-democracy movement, such as joining some of the social media groups through which protesters coordinated their actions.
Sources told the South China Morning Post that, although the Foreign and Commonwealth Office was still considering Cheng’s case, the Home Office – Britain’s interior ministry – was supportive of it.
Revealed: Britain’s ‘disgraceful’ efforts to deny nationality to Hongkongers
Dominic Raab, the Foreign Secretary, in November summoned Chinese ambassador Liu Xiaoming over what he called “the disgraceful mistreatment that Mr Cheng faced when he was in detention in mainland China”.
“We have made clear that we expect the Chinese authorities to review and hold to account those responsible,” Raab said then.
Benedict Rogers, of the London-based Hong Kong Watch human rights organisation, said he had written privately to British Prime Minister Boris Johnson three weeks ago, demanding action on China’s human rights issues.
“So far there has been no response,” Rogers said.
That put GCHQ at odds with domestic counter-intelligence and security agency MI5, whose head Andrew Parker said last week that he had “no reason today to think that” London’s long-standing intelligence partnership with Washington would be affected if Huawei was involved in building the network.
Washington has accused Huawei of being a threat to national security, lobbying its allies to veto the company’s involvement on the basis that its telecoms equipment could have “back doors” accessible to the Chinese government.