Lau Chin-shek

This is a Chinese name; the family name is Lau.
Lau Chin-shek
劉千石

Lau Chin-shek
Member of Legislative Council of Hong Kong
In office
1 October 1991  December 1994
Succeeded by Lee Cheuk-yan
In office
1 October 1995  30 June 1997
Preceded by Lee Cheuk-yan
Succeeded by Replaced by Provisional Legislative Council
In office
1 July 1998  30 September 2008
Preceded by New legislature
Succeeded by Raymond Wong Yuk-man
Personal details
Born (1944-09-12) September 12, 1944
Guangzhou, Guangdong
Nationality Hong Kong
Political party Democratic Party(1994–2000)
Hong Kong Confederation of Trade Unions
Religion Christianity
Lau Chin-shek
Traditional Chinese 劉千石
Simplified Chinese 刘千石

Lau Chin-shek (born 12 September 1944 in Guangzhou, Guangdong with family root in Shunde, Guangdong) is the President of the Hong Kong Confederation of Trade Unions and a vice Chairman of the Hong Kong Christian Industrial Committee. He was born in Guangzhou and had a secondary school education. He was a member of the Legislative Council from 1991 to 2008.

Background

Lau smuggled from Guangzhou to Hong Kong in 1960. Since the 1980s, he has been a labour activist, working to help factory workers in Sham Shui Po and Cheung Sha Wan, where working conditions were poor.

During the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989, Lau and other pro-democracy activists expressed sympathy and support to the student demonstrators who had gathered at Tiananmen Square. He and others also founded The Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Patriotic Democratic Movements in China, which organises the anniversary commemoration of the 1989 protests.

In 1990, Lau and other labour activists, including Lee Cheuk Yan, established the 160,000-strong Hong Kong Confederation of Trade Unions. Lau ran in the Hong Kong legislative elections in 1991, and was elected. Lau was re-elected four times.

Lau was a lawmaker continuously from 1991 to 2008, except he resigned in 1994 but elected again in 1995, a brief period during 1997 and 1998 when the sovereignty of Hong Kong was transferred to the People's Republic of China, and the Legislative Council temporarily became a Provisional Legislative Council which was filled with people indirectly hand picked by Beijing.

In recent years, however, Lau has moderated his stance against Beijing. He was expelled from the Democratic Party (Hong Kong) in 2000 because of having an identity of two parties. Once branded subversive by the central authorities, Mr Lau had been barred from entering mainland China for more than a decade. In May 2000, after quiet lobbying by Hong Kong top leaders, he was allowed to make a low-key visit to Guangzhou to see his ailing mother. Since then, he has been urging his pro-democracy colleagues to have "better communication with the Central Government" and visit mainland China and see for themselves the changes that are taking place in the country.

Lau lost his seat in the Legislative Council in the Legislative Election of 2008 with only 5.1% or 10,553 votes.

On a radio program in September 2008, he announces that he has been diagnosed with colorectal cancer. He says the cancer is under control.

Legislative Council of Hong Kong
New constituency Member of Legislative Council
Representative for Kowloon Central
1991–1994
Served alongside: Lam Kui-shing
Succeeded by
Lee Cheuk-yan
Preceded by
Lee Cheuk-yan
as Representative for Kowloon Central
Member of Legislative Council
Representative for Kowloon South
1995–1997
Replaced by Provisional Legislative Council
New parliament Member of Legislative Council
Representative for Kowloon West constituency
1998–2008
With: Jasper Tsang, James To (1998–2008)
Frederick Fung (2000–2008)
Succeeded by
Raymond Wong
Party political offices
Preceded by
Anthony Cheung
Vice Chairperson of Democratic Party
1998
Served alongside: Yeung Sum
Succeeded by
Law Chi-kwong
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