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Ma Lik

Ma Lik, GBS, JP (Chinese: 馬力; 23 February 1952 – 8 August 2007), was a Legislative Councillor, and was the Chairman of the Democratic Alliance for Betterment of Hong Kong (DAB), a pro-Beijing political party in Hong Kong.

Ma Lik
馬力
Chairman of the Democratic Alliance for the Betterment and Progress of Hong Kong
In office
9 December 2003 – 8 August 2007
Preceded byTsang Yok-sing
Succeeded byTam Yiu-chung
Member of the Legislative Council
In office
1 October 2004 – 8 August 2007
Preceded byCyd Ho
Succeeded byAnson Chan
ConstituencyHong Kong Island
Personal details
Born(1952-02-23)23 February 1952
Guangzhou
Died8 August 2007(2007-08-08) (aged 55)
Guangzhou
NationalityHong Kong Chinese
Political partyDAB
SpouseLeung Wai-ching
ResidenceHong Kong
Alma materChinese University of Hong Kong
ProfessionPolitician
Secondary school teacher
Journalist
Website

Education edit

Ma Lik attended the Pui Kiu Middle School. He graduated with a bachelor's degree (with Honours) from the Department of Chinese from United College, Chinese University of Hong Kong.

Early years edit

He was born in Guangzhou[1] and is of Xiamen, Fujian ancestry.[2] was a teacher in the Pui Kiu Middle School, a pro-Chinese secondary school in Hong Kong. He was a deputy publisher of the Hong Kong Commercial Daily and a local Deputy to the National People's Congress.[3]

Career edit

Ma was formerly the Secretary General of the DAB, and became the Chairman of the DAB in December 2003 when Jasper Tsang resigned following the poor performance of the party in the November 2003 District Council elections;[4] in those elections, the pro-democratic camp won 150 seats, while DAB secured only 62 seats out of the 205 DAB candidates fielded.[5] Ma was re-elected leader on 25 April 2007.[6]

Ma served in the Basic Law Promotion Steering Committee, Hong Kong Cheshire Home Foundation, and Committee on the Promotion of Civic Education. He was formerly the Chief Editor of the Hong Kong Commercial Daily, Deputy Secretary General of the Hong Kong Basic Law Consultative Committee, Director of Treasure Land International Property Consultants, General Manager of The Hong Kong Institute for Promotion of Chinese Culture, and member of the Selection Committee for the First Government of HKSAR.[3]

Ma was active in the political circles in Hong Kong and Mainland China. Ma wrote weekly and daily columns that appeared in Hong Kong Economic Times, Ming Pao and The Sun.

Ma announced in 2004, prior to standing for election to the Legislative Council, that he had been diagnosed with colon cancer.[7]

Death edit

He left for treatment in Guangzhou soon after the Tiananmen controversy he sparked (see below). He died on 8 August 2007 at 2 pm in Guangzhou Sun Yat-sen University.[8] His body was transported back to Hong Kong on 11 August 2007. The funeral was held on 23 August. He was cremated according to his wishes.

Ma's death precipitated the 2007 Hong Kong Island by-election, which was won by Anson Chan on 2 December 2007.[9]

Tiananmen Square Massacre denial furore edit

On 15 May 2007, during an informal meeting Ma had with journalists to discuss political reform,[10] Ma was asked on his views on the "Tiananmen massacre". Ma caused huge furore which hit radio broadcasts, the front pages and editorials of several of the local newspapers, which cited him denying that clampdown of the protesters was a "massacre".[11]

He said of 4000 students at the scene, not everyone was killed; certain student leaders, namely Chai Ling, Wuerkaixi, Feng Chungde, and Hou Dejian, were able to leave the protest site without incident, therefore it is not a massacre.[12] Comments which appeared to cause the most offense related to the alleged army tanks' rolling over protesters, and the PLA's cremation of victim's bodies on-site:

How could people say bodies were minced under the tanks? Has anybody tried mincing meat under tanks? Try doing this with pigs and we will know! ....It takes 1000 °C to cremate bodies. If [the army] could burn bodies this way, there would be no backlogs at the cremation chambers, would there?[12]

Ma questioned whether "Gweilos" (a racial epithet for Caucasians) should be the ones to interpret the truth about Tiananmen,[12] and asserted that Hong Kong was "not mature enough", for believing a massacre took place. Hong Kong lacked patriotism and national identity, and would thus not be ready for universal suffrage until 2022.[12]

Ma also asked the Education Department to define massacre as events where over 4,000 were dead, which would make Tiananmen Square protests of 1989 not a massacre under the new definition. He later withdrew the redefinition request.[citation needed]

Responses edit

Democrats and relatives of victims all attacked Ma for his comments. Szeto Wah called Ma "shameless", questioning if killings had to be on the scale of the Nanking Massacre to qualify.[13] He said that "facts written in blood cannot be twisted by lies".[12] Democrat Cheung Man Kwong criticised the attempt at "whitewash",[12] and denounced Ma as "cold-blooded".[7] Student leader of the protest, Wang Dan, said Ma was "utterly devoid of a conscience".[11] Albert Ho said: "Ma's remarks have put salt on the open historical wounds".[7]

Outraged by Ma's comments, 127 "Tiananmen Mothers", led by Ding Zilin, demanded a retraction and a public apology for the humiliation he has heaped on those who died.[14]

The day after the remarks appeared in the headlines, Ma attended an RTHK radio phone-in, where he apologised for making "frivolous and giddy" remarks. Ma claimed he was merely trying to bring the rash claims about the number and manner of deaths reported in the foreign press into proper perspective.[7] He admitted he had perhaps been careless with his words, and would assume full responsibility for what he said.[15] He stopped short of apologising for his comments in general.

One DAB Vice Chairman Tam Yiu Chung defended Ma, but questioned the timing: "people will understand it gradually".[12] Fearing political fallout, another DAB Vice Chairman, Lau Kong Wah (劉江華), distanced the party from Ma, saying that Ma had expressed "a personal opinion".[11] Chan Wing-kee (陳永棋), the head of ATV and CPPCC Standing Committee member declared Ma "a patriot" for his comments.[14] Chan furthermore denounced the perennial Legco debate on the 4 June incident as "unnecessary".[16] Another CPPCC member, Chang Ka-mun, chimed in, saying it was "irrational" to compare 4 June to the Nanjing massacre.[17]

The Central committee of the DAB declined any further action after their meeting on 22 May, stating that Vice-chairman Lau's response was adequate. There was no formal apology.

The annual vigil in memory of Tiananmen attracted an increased turnout in 2007. An estimated 55,000 people, more than a few of whom appear to have been spurred to attend by Ma's comments, packed Victoria Park,[18] up from 44,000 one year earlier.[19]

Possible motives edit

Analysts began to comment that Ma's remarks might have been part of a concerted propaganda attempt by Beijing to dampen expectations for universal suffrage.[20]

The power over Hong Kong's political system rests on the central government, not the special administrative region.[21]

The timing of the above statement by NPC Chairman Wu Bangguo to a NPC deputies' meeting in March 2007, is considered important, as Donald Tsang promised a green paper (consultative document) on electoral reform would be published in the summer. [citation needed]

More recently, some local loyalists have issued statements pushing back the date for universal suffrage. Most notably, Cheng Yiu-tong ruled out direct elections for the Chief Executive in 2012.[20] He further warned pro-democracy advocates that universal suffrage in 2017 was unlikely. He blamed the lack of progress on the "intransigence" of democrats, who blocked reform proposals put forward in December 2005. Cheng said that the electoral system would "march on the spot again in 2012".[22]

Other controversies edit

Anti-RTHK edit

On 20 October 1999 the pro-Beijing group fiercely attacked Radio Television Hong Kong (RTHK). Ma Lik publicly attacked RTHK from changing the role from a "watchdog" to a "mouthpiece" of the Hong Kong government.[23]

Criticising Hong Kong edit

Ma Lik criticised the rate at which Hong Kong is moving. And that it would take until 2022 for the public to have acquired enough patriotism to accept Communist party rule.[24]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Lo, Sonny Shiu-Hing; Hung, Steven Chung-Fun; Loo, Jeff Hai-Chi (2019). China's New United Front Work in Hong. Springer Singapore Kong. p. 46. ISBN 9789811384837.
  2. ^ Ma Lik DABHK[dead link]
  3. ^ a b Ma Lik, Legco 18 February 2006 at the Wayback Machine, Retrieved 18 May 2007
  4. ^ Cannix Yau, "Ma pledges to win back trust in DAB" 22 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine, The Standard, 10 December 2003
  5. ^ Eddie Luk, "Public speak out with votes" 22 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine, The Standard, 27 November 2003
  6. ^ Ma Lik reappointed as DAB chairman, Radio Television Hong Kong, Retrieved 18 May 2007
  7. ^ a b c d Carrie Chan and Diana Lee, , The Standard, 17 May 2007
  8. ^ News on Ma Lik's death 10 January 2016 at the Wayback Machine, Yahoo! Retrieved 8 August 2007.
  9. ^ . Archived from the original on 15 December 2007.
  10. ^ "Ma Lik's Comments on June Fourth", Page A2, East South West North, ZoneEuropa, Accessed 22 May 2007
  11. ^ a b c Pro-Beijing lawmaker in Hong Kong denies Tiananmen Square 'massacre' in 1989, Associated Press, International Herald Tribune, 15 May 2007
  12. ^ a b c d e f g Ambrose Leung, "Fury at DAB chief's Tiananmen tirade", Page 1, South China Morning Post, 16 May 2007
  13. ^ Page 1, Ming Pao, 16 May 2007
  14. ^ a b Page A5, Ming Pao, 18 May 2007
  15. ^ 馬力認輕佻拒撤觀點,否認促為六四定調 願受黨處分, Ming Pao, 17 May 2007 (in Chinese)
  16. ^ , The Standard, 18 May 2007
  17. ^ Damon Pang, , The Standard, 21 May 2007
  18. ^ Scarlett Chiang, 4 June turnout rises amid outrage at Ma 22 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine, The Standard, 5 June 2007
  19. ^ Justin Mitchell and Michael Ng, Tens of thousands at vigil 22 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine, The Standard, 5 June 2006
  20. ^ a b Chris Yeung, "Pouring cold water on democracy hopes", Page A14, South China Morning Post, 21 May 2007
  21. ^ Chris Yeung, "Pouring cold water on democracy hopes", Page A14, South China Morning Post, 21 May 2007,
  22. ^ Gary Cheng, "Warning over reform in 2017", Page A2, South China Morning Post, 21 May 2007
  23. ^ Wong, Yiu-Chung. [2004] (2004). One Country, Two Systems in Crisis: Hong Kong's Transformation Since the handover. Lexington Books. ISBN 0-7391-0492-6.
  24. ^ Pepper, Suzanne. Keeping Democracy at Bay: Hong Kong and the Challenge of Chinese Political. [2007] (2007). Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 0-7425-0877-3.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Ma Lik at Wikimedia Commons
Legislative Council of Hong Kong
Preceded by Member of Legislative Council
Representative for Hong Kong Island
2004–2007
Served alongside: Martin Lee, Yeung Sum, Choy So-yuk, Audrey Eu, Rita Fan
Succeeded by
Party political offices
Preceded by Chairman of Democratic Alliance for the Betterment of Hong Kong
2003–2007
Succeeded by

chinese, 馬力, february, 1952, august, 2007, legislative, councillor, chairman, democratic, alliance, betterment, hong, kong, beijing, political, party, hong, kong, jp馬力chairman, democratic, alliance, betterment, progress, hong, kongin, office, december, 2003, a. Ma Lik GBS JP Chinese 馬力 23 February 1952 8 August 2007 was a Legislative Councillor and was the Chairman of the Democratic Alliance for Betterment of Hong Kong DAB a pro Beijing political party in Hong Kong Ma LikGBS JP馬力Chairman of the Democratic Alliance for the Betterment and Progress of Hong KongIn office 9 December 2003 8 August 2007Preceded byTsang Yok singSucceeded byTam Yiu chungMember of the Legislative CouncilIn office 1 October 2004 8 August 2007Preceded byCyd HoSucceeded byAnson ChanConstituencyHong Kong IslandPersonal detailsBorn 1952 02 23 23 February 1952GuangzhouDied8 August 2007 2007 08 08 aged 55 GuangzhouNationalityHong Kong ChinesePolitical partyDABSpouseLeung Wai chingResidenceHong KongAlma materChinese University of Hong KongProfessionPoliticianSecondary school teacherJournalistWebsitemalik hk in Chinese Ma LikTraditional Chinese馬力Simplified Chinese马力Jyutpingmaa5 lik6TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinMǎliYue CantoneseJyutpingmaa5 lik6Southern MinHokkien POJMa Le k In this Chinese name the family name is Ma Contents 1 Education 2 Early years 3 Career 4 Death 5 Tiananmen Square Massacre denial furore 5 1 Responses 5 2 Possible motives 6 Other controversies 6 1 Anti RTHK 6 2 Criticising Hong Kong 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksEducation editMa Lik attended the Pui Kiu Middle School He graduated with a bachelor s degree with Honours from the Department of Chinese from United College Chinese University of Hong Kong Early years editHe was born in Guangzhou 1 and is of Xiamen Fujian ancestry 2 was a teacher in the Pui Kiu Middle School a pro Chinese secondary school in Hong Kong He was a deputy publisher of the Hong Kong Commercial Daily and a local Deputy to the National People s Congress 3 Career editMa was formerly the Secretary General of the DAB and became the Chairman of the DAB in December 2003 when Jasper Tsang resigned following the poor performance of the party in the November 2003 District Council elections 4 in those elections the pro democratic camp won 150 seats while DAB secured only 62 seats out of the 205 DAB candidates fielded 5 Ma was re elected leader on 25 April 2007 6 Ma served in the Basic Law Promotion Steering Committee Hong Kong Cheshire Home Foundation and Committee on the Promotion of Civic Education He was formerly the Chief Editor of the Hong Kong Commercial Daily Deputy Secretary General of the Hong Kong Basic Law Consultative Committee Director of Treasure Land International Property Consultants General Manager of The Hong Kong Institute for Promotion of Chinese Culture and member of the Selection Committee for the First Government of HKSAR 3 Ma was active in the political circles in Hong Kong and Mainland China Ma wrote weekly and daily columns that appeared in Hong Kong Economic Times Ming Pao and The Sun Ma announced in 2004 prior to standing for election to the Legislative Council that he had been diagnosed with colon cancer 7 Death editHe left for treatment in Guangzhou soon after the Tiananmen controversy he sparked see below He died on 8 August 2007 at 2 pm in Guangzhou Sun Yat sen University 8 His body was transported back to Hong Kong on 11 August 2007 The funeral was held on 23 August He was cremated according to his wishes Ma s death precipitated the 2007 Hong Kong Island by election which was won by Anson Chan on 2 December 2007 9 Tiananmen Square Massacre denial furore editOn 15 May 2007 during an informal meeting Ma had with journalists to discuss political reform 10 Ma was asked on his views on the Tiananmen massacre Ma caused huge furore which hit radio broadcasts the front pages and editorials of several of the local newspapers which cited him denying that clampdown of the protesters was a massacre 11 He said of 4000 students at the scene not everyone was killed certain student leaders namely Chai Ling Wuerkaixi Feng Chungde and Hou Dejian were able to leave the protest site without incident therefore it is not a massacre 12 Comments which appeared to cause the most offense related to the alleged army tanks rolling over protesters and the PLA s cremation of victim s bodies on site How could people say bodies were minced under the tanks Has anybody tried mincing meat under tanks Try doing this with pigs and we will know It takes 1000 C to cremate bodies If the army could burn bodies this way there would be no backlogs at the cremation chambers would there 12 Ma questioned whether Gweilos a racial epithet for Caucasians should be the ones to interpret the truth about Tiananmen 12 and asserted that Hong Kong was not mature enough for believing a massacre took place Hong Kong lacked patriotism and national identity and would thus not be ready for universal suffrage until 2022 12 Ma also asked the Education Department to define massacre as events where over 4 000 were dead which would make Tiananmen Square protests of 1989 not a massacre under the new definition He later withdrew the redefinition request citation needed Responses edit Democrats and relatives of victims all attacked Ma for his comments Szeto Wah called Ma shameless questioning if killings had to be on the scale of the Nanking Massacre to qualify 13 He said that facts written in blood cannot be twisted by lies 12 Democrat Cheung Man Kwong criticised the attempt at whitewash 12 and denounced Ma as cold blooded 7 Student leader of the protest Wang Dan said Ma was utterly devoid of a conscience 11 Albert Ho said Ma s remarks have put salt on the open historical wounds 7 Outraged by Ma s comments 127 Tiananmen Mothers led by Ding Zilin demanded a retraction and a public apology for the humiliation he has heaped on those who died 14 The day after the remarks appeared in the headlines Ma attended an RTHK radio phone in where he apologised for making frivolous and giddy remarks Ma claimed he was merely trying to bring the rash claims about the number and manner of deaths reported in the foreign press into proper perspective 7 He admitted he had perhaps been careless with his words and would assume full responsibility for what he said 15 He stopped short of apologising for his comments in general One DAB Vice Chairman Tam Yiu Chung defended Ma but questioned the timing people will understand it gradually 12 Fearing political fallout another DAB Vice Chairman Lau Kong Wah 劉江華 distanced the party from Ma saying that Ma had expressed a personal opinion 11 Chan Wing kee 陳永棋 the head of ATV and CPPCC Standing Committee member declared Ma a patriot for his comments 14 Chan furthermore denounced the perennial Legco debate on the 4 June incident as unnecessary 16 Another CPPCC member Chang Ka mun chimed in saying it was irrational to compare 4 June to the Nanjing massacre 17 The Central committee of the DAB declined any further action after their meeting on 22 May stating that Vice chairman Lau s response was adequate There was no formal apology The annual vigil in memory of Tiananmen attracted an increased turnout in 2007 An estimated 55 000 people more than a few of whom appear to have been spurred to attend by Ma s comments packed Victoria Park 18 up from 44 000 one year earlier 19 Possible motives editAnalysts began to comment that Ma s remarks might have been part of a concerted propaganda attempt by Beijing to dampen expectations for universal suffrage 20 The power over Hong Kong s political system rests on the central government not the special administrative region 21 The timing of the above statement by NPC Chairman Wu Bangguo to a NPC deputies meeting in March 2007 is considered important as Donald Tsang promised a green paper consultative document on electoral reform would be published in the summer citation needed More recently some local loyalists have issued statements pushing back the date for universal suffrage Most notably Cheng Yiu tong ruled out direct elections for the Chief Executive in 2012 20 He further warned pro democracy advocates that universal suffrage in 2017 was unlikely He blamed the lack of progress on the intransigence of democrats who blocked reform proposals put forward in December 2005 Cheng said that the electoral system would march on the spot again in 2012 22 Other controversies editAnti RTHK edit On 20 October 1999 the pro Beijing group fiercely attacked Radio Television Hong Kong RTHK Ma Lik publicly attacked RTHK from changing the role from a watchdog to a mouthpiece of the Hong Kong government 23 Criticising Hong Kong edit Ma Lik criticised the rate at which Hong Kong is moving And that it would take until 2022 for the public to have acquired enough patriotism to accept Communist party rule 24 See also editUnited front in Hong Kong Regina Ip Tsang Yok sing Tsang Tak singReferences edit Lo Sonny Shiu Hing Hung Steven Chung Fun Loo Jeff Hai Chi 2019 China s New United Front Work in Hong Springer Singapore Kong p 46 ISBN 9789811384837 Ma Lik DABHK dead link a b Ma Lik Legco Archived 18 February 2006 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 18 May 2007 Cannix Yau Ma pledges to win back trust in DAB Archived 22 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine The Standard 10 December 2003 Eddie Luk Public speak out with votes Archived 22 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine The Standard 27 November 2003 Ma Lik reappointed as DAB chairman Radio Television Hong Kong Retrieved 18 May 2007 a b c d Carrie Chan and Diana Lee Ma critics use 4 June row to attack DAB The Standard 17 May 2007 News on Ma Lik s death Archived 10 January 2016 at the Wayback Machine Yahoo Retrieved 8 August 2007 Election Result of the 2007 LegCo Hong Kong Island by election Archived from the original on 15 December 2007 Ma Lik s Comments on June Fourth Page A2 East South West North ZoneEuropa Accessed 22 May 2007 a b c Pro Beijing lawmaker in Hong Kong denies Tiananmen Square massacre in 1989 Associated Press International Herald Tribune 15 May 2007 a b c d e f g Ambrose Leung Fury at DAB chief s Tiananmen tirade Page 1 South China Morning Post 16 May 2007 Page 1 Ming Pao 16 May 2007 a b Page A5 Ming Pao 18 May 2007 馬力認輕佻拒撤觀點 否認促為六四定調 願受黨處分 Ming Pao 17 May 2007 in Chinese Ma s massacre denials draw fire from activists The Standard 18 May 2007 Damon Pang Massacre remarks trigger sharp exchange at City Forum The Standard 21 May 2007 Scarlett Chiang 4 June turnout rises amid outrage at Ma Archived 22 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine The Standard 5 June 2007 Justin Mitchell and Michael Ng Tens of thousands at vigil Archived 22 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine The Standard 5 June 2006 a b Chris Yeung Pouring cold water on democracy hopes Page A14 South China Morning Post 21 May 2007 Chris Yeung Pouring cold water on democracy hopes Page A14 South China Morning Post 21 May 2007 Gary Cheng Warning over reform in 2017 Page A2 South China Morning Post 21 May 2007 Wong Yiu Chung 2004 2004 One Country Two Systems in Crisis Hong Kong s Transformation Since the handover Lexington Books ISBN 0 7391 0492 6 Pepper Suzanne Keeping Democracy at Bay Hong Kong and the Challenge of Chinese Political 2007 2007 Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 0 7425 0877 3 External links edit nbsp Media related to Ma Lik at Wikimedia Commons Legislative Council of Hong Kong Preceded byCyd Ho Member of Legislative CouncilRepresentative for Hong Kong Island2004 2007 Served alongside Martin Lee Yeung Sum Choy So yuk Audrey Eu Rita Fan Succeeded byAnson Chan Party political offices Preceded byJasper Tsang Chairman of Democratic Alliance for the Betterment of Hong Kong2003 2007 Succeeded byTam Yiu chung Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ma Lik amp oldid 1185642669, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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