Hong Kong court allows arrested cardinal to attend former pope Benedict’s funeral
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Cardinal Joseph Zen (centre) was arrested last May over a now-disbanded fund that helped pro-democracy protesters.
PHOTO: AFP
HONG KONG - A 90-year-old Hong Kong cardinal arrested in 2022 under the city’s national security law received court permission on Tuesday to attend the funeral of former pope Benedict XVI, a source told AFP.
Cardinal Joseph Zen, one of Asia’s highest-ranking Catholics, had his passport confiscated by the authorities after he was arrested last May over a now-disbanded fund that helped pro-democracy protesters.
He is among the scores of pro-democracy supporters facing legal threats in Hong Kong, as China stamps out dissent in the former British colony following huge and often violent protests in 2019.
Magistrate Peter Law ruled at a closed-door hearing on Tuesday that Cardinal Zen could leave the city for five days and that his passport should be temporarily returned, a source with knowledge of the decision told AFP, asking not to be identified.
The funeral for former pontiff Benedict, who died on New Year’s Eve, will be led by his successor Pope Francis in the Vatican on Thursday.
Pope Benedict elevated Cardinal Zen to the Catholic Church’s College of Cardinals in 2006.
Hours before the Tuesday hearing, Cardinal Zen published an article praising the former pontiff as a “great defender of truth” and for his contributions to the Chinese church.
“He could not accept any compromise,” Cardinal Zen wrote, referring to a letter that former pope Benedict wrote in 2007 asking China’s communist government to respect religious freedom.
In recent years, Cardinal Zen has accused the Vatican of “selling out” China’s underground Catholic community, after Pope Francis sought to improve ties with Beijing.
The cardinal was among five pro-democracy campaigners arrested last May for “collusion with foreign forces”, an offence under the national security law that carries a sentence of up to life imprisonment.
They were trustees of the 612 Humanitarian Relief Fund, which was set up in 2019 to raise funds to support the legal and medical needs of arrested pro-democracy protesters.
In November, the group was fined after a court found they had failed to properly register the fund.
The trustees have lodged an appeal with a higher court.
While Cardinal Zen was arrested under the draconian national security law, he has not yet been charged with any crimes under it.
Like many of those arrested under that law, or still under investigation, he was forced to forfeit his passport after his arrest. AFP


