A Hong Kong student has been jailed for eight weeks over impersonating a TVB actor and withdrawing him from the city’s organ donation registry last May.

Eastern Magistrates' Courts
Eastern Magistrates’ Courts. File photo: Kelly Ho/HKFP.

Wong Tsz-ching, 20, appeared at the Eastern Magistrates’ Courts on Wednesday. Earlier this month, he pleaded guilty to criminal damage linked to a withdrawal application he made on the city’s organ donation registry.

The charge relates to Wong filing an application on the Centralised Organ Donation Registry’s website on May 23, 2023, in which he entered the personal information of TVB actor Cho Wing-lim. Cho is known for his support of the police.

Under police caution, the 20-year-old said he learnt from the news that there was a wave of withdrawal applications from the registry. He said he decided to submit the application “for fun” and “out of curiosity.”

The series of withdrawals came after the government proposed integrating Hong Kong hospitals with the China Organ Transplant Response System, mainland China’s mechanism for allocating organs.

Organ Donation Centralised Organ Donation Register
Centralised Organ Donation Register. Photo: Kelly Ho/HKFP.

Local media outlets reported that some Hongkongers said in social media posts that they would be reluctant to donate organs to the mainland. Chief Executive John Lee condemned the withdrawals as “very similar” to behaviour during the protests and unrest in 2019, when Hongkongers demonstrated against the local and central authorities.

Magistrate Stephanie Tsui sentenced Wong on Wednesday, RTHK reported. She said the case was serious and that his actions had harmed the public’s interests. The registry was an important part of the city’s organ donation mechanism, Tsui added.

The defence said they would appeal his sentence. Wong, who has been in custody since pleading guilty, was released on HK$20,000 bail pending the appeal.

‘Spirit of selfless love’

Wong admitted to the police after his arrest last year that he had obtained Cho’s information from a doxxing website, Ming Pao reported. Earlier, the court also heard that Wong had filed withdrawal applications using the information of pro-Beijing lawmaker Junius Ho and former chief executive Carrie Lam, although neither application was ultimately completed.

Chief Executive John Lee meets the press on October 31, 2023. Photo: Hans Tse/HKFP.
Chief Executive John Lee meets the press. File photo: Hans Tse/HKFP.

Managed by the Department of Health, the Centralised Organ Donation Registry requires applicants to submit their identity number, date of birth, mobile phone number and address to file a withdrawal application.

When Lee condemned the “abnormal” withdrawals last year, he said those behind the acts were “individual shameless people.”

Last May, the government said the withdrawals “completely go against the spirit of selfless love in organ donation.”

“Some individuals also wantonly vilify the constructive significance of the proposed establishment of a standing mutual assistance mechanism for transplant by the two places, undoubtedly despising the inseparable ties between citizens of Hong Kong and the Mainland,” the government’s statement read.

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Hillary Leung is a journalist at Hong Kong Free Press, where she reports on local politics and social issues, and assists with editing. Since joining in late 2021, she has covered the Covid-19 pandemic, political court cases including the 47 democrats national security trial, and challenges faced by minority communities.

Born and raised in Hong Kong, Hillary completed her undergraduate degree in journalism and sociology at the University of Hong Kong. She worked at TIME Magazine in 2019, where she wrote about Asia and overnight US news before turning her focus to the protests that began that summer. At Coconuts Hong Kong, she covered general news and wrote features, including about a Black Lives Matter march that drew controversy amid the local pro-democracy movement and two sisters who were born to a domestic worker and lived undocumented for 30 years in Hong Kong.