Winnie Yu (nurse)
Winnie Yu | |||||||||||
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Born | |||||||||||
Nationality | Chinese (HK) | ||||||||||
Occupation | activist, nurse | ||||||||||
Chinese name | |||||||||||
Chinese | 余慧明 | ||||||||||
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Winnie Yu Wai-ming (Chinese: 余慧明; born 28 May 1987) is a Hong Kong nurse and activist. She is the founder and chairwoman of the Hospital Authority Employees Alliance (HAEA), a labour union representing Hospital Authority staff. She played an instrumental role in the labour strike in February 2020 to demand full border closure in response to the COVID-19 outbreak in Hong Kong.
Biography[]
Yu was trained as a nurse in university. She became a nurse at a Hospital Authority public hospital after graduation.[1] In the 2014 Occupy protests, she volunteered as a paramedic at the protest site which opened the door for her to social activism. She also volunteered in many protest scenes, including the 2016 Mong Kok civil unrest. She was also transferred from Intensive Care Unit to the Hospital Authority head office and planned to emigrate to Japan.[2]
In the 2019 anti-extradition protests, Yu became active in social activism, volunteering as a paramedic.[2] The Hospital Authority Employees Alliance (HAEA) was founded in the call for forming labour unions to launch a city-wide strike to pressure the government,[3] in which Yu became the chairwoman. Following the first outbreak of the COVID-19 in Hong Kong in January 2020, the Hong Kong government announced several control measures, including decreases in flights and closures of several border ports. Health care experts and the HAEA called for stronger border control closures than what the government has announced; at that time, areas in mainland China adjacent to Hong Kong, such as Shenzhen, had significantly more cases of coronavirus than Hong Kong. The HAEA called for a full border closure with mainland China, demanding that the government prevent all non-Hong Kong residents from entering the city via the mainland. The union attracted more than 12,000 applications to join as of January 2020.[4]
Following Chief Executive Carrie Lam's announcement to close four borders to the mainland, rather than a full closure demanded by the HAEA, the union launched a labour strike for five days between 3 and 7 February 2020.[5] Yu said that over 2,500 hospital workers participated in the strike on the first day, with about 60 to 70 percent of them being nurses.[5] The strike was attended by about 6,000 workers each day over the five days. In response, Chief Executive Carrie Lam announced that four more borders to be closed but refused to fully close the border.[6] She also called the medical workers who were on strike as "radical".[7] In response to the government's decision not to fully close the border, Yu shifted the union's demands, asking for adequate protection measures for HA medical workers and for the HA to rule out penalising staff who participated in the strike.[1] as well as On 7 February, the HAEA fell 2,000 votes short of the target it set to extend industrial action into middle of next week. In response, Yu announced an end to the five-day strike, though she said that ending the strike "doesn't mean [the union members] are giving up" with their demands.[8]
Yu participated in the 2020 Hong Kong pro-democracy primaries and received 2,493 votes, winning against incumbent lawmaker Joseph Lee in the Health Services functional constituency.[9]
On 6 January 2021, Yu was among 53 members of the pro-democratic camp who were arrested under the national security law, specifically its provision regarding alleged subversion. The group stood accused of the organisation of and participation in the primaries of July 2020.[10] Yu was released on bail on 7 January.[11]
On 28 February, Yu was formally charged, along with 46 others, for subversion.[12] After Yu was charged for subversion, she was suspended from her duties by the Hong Kong Hospital Authority.[13] On 28 July, she was released on bail, after her bail application being granted by High Court judge Esther Toh.[14][15] According to a written judgement that was released by the judiciary on 14 September, Toh granted her bail, observing in her written explanation that there was no evidence that Yu ever had an international connection.[16] On 8 March 2022, one day after Yu being arrested again, her bail was revoked by a magistrate; as the application of defence for lifting of reporting restrictions was turned down, the nature of the violation of bail conditions was not immediately clear.[17]
References[]
- ^ a b 黃蕊獻 (22 April 2020). "【專訪】從組織工會到走進議會 余慧明:我要真攬炒!". Inmediahk.net (in Chinese (Hong Kong)).
- ^ a b "【80後/余慧明】曾經是港豬 學日文計劃移民 今日希望盡了最大努力才再講End game". Ming Pao Weekly (in Chinese (Hong Kong)). 17 April 2020.
- ^ "開拓工運新戰線 43個行業籌組新工會 「醫管局員工陣線」收千人申請". Citizen News (in Chinese (Hong Kong)). 24 December 2019.
- ^ Cheung, Elizabeth; Lok-kei, Sum; Han, Albert (29 January 2020). "Hong Kong's partial border closure amid Wuhan coronavirus crisis too little, too late, experts and health care workers' union say". South China Morning Post.
- ^ a b "Hospital workers union demands full border closure". The Standard. 3 February 2020.
- ^ "Why won't Carrie Lam shut Hong Kong's border with mainland China?". South China Morning Post. 5 February 2020.
- ^ "More unions plan to join striking hospital workers". RTHK. 5 February 2020.
- ^ "Coronavirus: Hong Kong medical workers vote down plans to extend their strike having earlier escalated their action by occupying key floors of Hospital Authority headquarters". South China Morning Post. 7 February 2020.
- ^ "Hong Kong democrat primaries in full: Young 'localist resistance camp' come out on top". Hong Kong Free Press. 16 July 2020.
- ^ "National security law: Hong Kong rounds up 53 pro-democracy activists". BBC News. 6 January 2021. Retrieved 13 February 2021.
- ^ Chau, Candice (8 January 2021). "'Hong Kong has entered a bitter winter,' says primaries organiser as 52 democrats in mass arrest bailed out". Hong Kong Free Press. Retrieved 4 February 2021.
- ^ "Hong Kong charges 47 activists in largest use yet of new security law". BBC News. 1 March 2021. Retrieved 15 September 2021.
- ^ "Tears, fatigue and no-bathing gripes as bail marathon halted". The Standard. 3 March 2021. Archived from the original on 2 March 2021. Retrieved 3 March 2021.
- ^ "民主派初選47人案|余慧明獲高院批保釋 (12:44) - 20210728 - 港聞". 明報新聞網 - 即時新聞 instant news (in Traditional Chinese). Retrieved 28 July 2021.
- ^ "One of 47 pro-democracy suspects freed after months - RTHK". news.rthk.hk. Retrieved 28 July 2021.
- ^ "Subversion accused without overseas link posed no flight risk: Hong Kong judge". South China Morning Post. 14 September 2021. Retrieved 27 September 2021.
- ^ Chau, Candice (8 March 2022). "National security: ex-Hospital Authority union chief remanded in custody for violating bail terms". Hong Kong Free Press. Retrieved 9 March 2022.
- 1987 births
- Living people
- Hong Kong democracy activists
- Hong Kong localists
- Hong Kong nurses
- Women labour leaders
- Hong Kong political prisoners