China revokes licence of second mainland lawyer involved in case of 12 Hong Kong fugitives caught at sea
- Notice handed to Ren Quanniu does not mention the fugitives’ issue, but accuses him of breaching regulation in a 2018 case involving a Falun Gong follower
- The lawyer says the move could deter others in his profession from taking up politically sensitive cases on the mainland

Mainland Chinese authorities have revoked the licence of a second human rights lawyer who was involved in the case of 12 Hong Kong fugitives captured at sea, with the counsel saying the move could deter others in his profession from taking up politically sensitive assignments.
Ren Quanniu, 40, told the Post he had no plans to quit the human rights legal circle, insisting he would turn to an assistant to “speak out against injustices done to others”.
The lawyer who has specialised in human rights for seven years was informed by Henan’s provincial Department of Justice on Tuesday that he had been disbarred, after judicial authorities similarly stripped his colleague Lu Siwei last month of his licence over “inappropriate speech made online”.
Ren and Lu were among lawyers appointed by the family of the fugitives who insisted on representing their clients even though authorities had repeatedly requested them to drop the cases.
A notice by the Henan authorities to Ren, a copy of which was obtained by the Post, accused him of breaching lawyers’ regulations in a 2018 case in which he represented a follower of Falun Gong, a spiritual group regarded by the central government as a “cult organisation”. The notice, however, did not mention his involvement in the Hongkongers’ case.