UPDATE 2-Hong Kong kung fu master intends to run in leadership election
He heads the World Wing Chun Union, which focuses on the traditional southern Chinese kung fu style which was popularised in Hong Kong by Ip Man and Bruce Lee. Hong Kong born Sin has his own YouTube channel with 155,000 subscribers and posts online every few days on topics ranging from politics to the Beijing Olympics.
Hong Kong film producer and kung fu master Sin Kwok Lam said on Wednesday he intended to run in the city's leadership race, a surprise move that comes as incumbent Chief Executive Carrie Lam has yet to confirm whether she will run for a second term. The 65-year-old is the first person to announce their candidacy ahead of the election on March 27. Lam, who has presided over some of Hong Kong's most tumultuous periods in history, is due to end her term in June.
Willing candidates need the backing of a powerful "patriots-only" electoral body formed by 1,500 pro-Beijing people in Hong Kong. It was unclear whether Sin had such support. In a YouTube video, Sin said his internet supporters convinced him to change his mind on not getting involved in politics.
"Under the new election system, I believe every capable and reliable patriot can join the new chief executive election," Sin said. "I believe that I have the ability to win." With the election just weeks away, the absence of any news on candidates is unusual. Local media have speculated that potential candidates include leader Lam, Financial Secretary Paul Chan and former chief of the World Health Organisation, Margaret Chan.
Sin, who produced the film Ip Man, has been an active promoter of martial arts in the city. He heads the World Wing Chun Union, which focuses on the traditional southern Chinese kung fu style which was popularised in Hong Kong by Ip Man and Bruce Lee. Hong Kong born Sin has his own YouTube channel with 155,000 subscribers and posts online every few days on topics ranging from politics to the Beijing Olympics. In 2021 one of his shows focused on what he called 'Western hypocrisy' on Hong Kong.
He first started his online commentary in October 2019 at the height of Hong Kong's anti-government protests where he strongly sided with the government and the police force. The nomination period runs from Feb 15- March 2 and candidates must get nominations from at least 188 of the 1,500 people in the election committee, according to a document from city's legislature.
(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
ALSO READ
Hong Kong detains and deports press freedom group staffer from city
Understanding the financial risks of AI: Follow the money trail
China stocks rise as commodities shine; Hong Kong snaps winning streak
FTSE 100 edges lower as financials drag; ECB meeting in focus
China stocks wobble on weak CPI; Hong Kong snaps 3 days of gains