Place of birth: Hong Kong
Ancestral hometown: Dongguan city, Guangdong provinceWong Kei-kwan (born 1955),[1] better known by his pen name Zunzi, is a Hong Kong political cartoonist known for his satire and pro-democracy stance and had been described as "the territory's most prominent political cartoonist".[2] [3] [4]
Zunzi was born in 1955 and was raised in Ma Tau Wai Estate during his youth life. He was educated at the Diocesan Boys' School and graduated from the Department of Fine Arts at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. He had been teacher and joined Ming Pao as an editor for foreign wire services.
He began his political cartoonist career in 1983 for Ming Pao at the invitation of newspaper founder Louis Cha at the time when Hong Kong people became more politically aware during the Sino-British negotiations on Hong Kong's sovereignty. His cartoons were also published in Apple Daily and Next Magazine until they were forced to disband on the suspicion of violating Hong Kong national security law in 2021. He had also drawn cartoons for pro-Beijing newspapers New Evening Post and Ta Kung Pao for HK$50 each publication.[5]
His cartoons were known for its political satire about Hong Kong and Chinese politics and his pro-democracy stance, including the 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre, 2008 Chinese milk scandal, 2014 Hong Kong protests and the abolition of the term limit for the President of the People's Republic of China in 2018.[5]
At an art exchange event in Singapore in 1998, Zunzi refused a request to change the content of a cartoon about founder of Singapore Lee Kuan Yew and then Prime Minister Goh Chok Tong and all of his works were taken down as a result. While some Hong Kong media said it was Singaporean officials who did that, Ming Pao said the action was made by the National Gallery Singapore.
In 1999 soon after the handover of Macau, Zunzi, his wife and 11 Macanese artists were detained by the police for three hours for organising an "alternative" handover celebration activity.
In 2020, more than half of 13 Zunzi's illustrations in a liberal education textbook published by Ming Pao were censored, which included the satire cartoons about Chief Executives Leung Chun-ying and Carrie Lam, the 2014 NPCSC Decision on Hong Kong that ruled out universal suffrage of Hong Kong in 2017 and the Causeway Bay Books disappearances.[6]
Between 2022 and 2023, the Hong Kong government on six different occasions criticised Zunzi's cartoons for "inaccuracy". On 5 January 2023, Chief Secretary for Administration Eric Chan posted on Facebook criticising Zunzi's cartoon for "biased, misleading and untrue allegations against the Chief Executive in fulfilling his constitutional duty to maintain national security".[7] [8]
On 2 April 2023, Secretary for Security Chris Tang criticised a Zunzi's illustrations which mocked the government for allocating huge amount of funding to the Hong Kong Police's equipment renewal, accusing Zunzi of "using some misleading accusations to incite dissatisfaction with the government".[7]
Following Tang's remarks, a state-run Ta Kung Pao commentary on 4 April said Zunzi always "smears" the policies of the central and SAR government, supports the anti-China forces and mocking the patriotic forces. The commentary urged the SAR government to prosecute Zunzi for defamation.[7] [9]
In May, a Zunzi cartoon mocking the proposed District Council election overhaul received criticism from the Home and Youth Affairs Bureau, condemning Ming Pao repeatedly misleading remarks against the government proposal, "which is an act of politics over morality".[7] [10] [11]
On 11 May, Ming Pao announced that Zunzi cartoons will stop publishing from 14 May and thanked the cartoonist for "witnessing the changes of time with us in the past 40 years" without further explanation.[7] [12] The Hong Kong Journalists Association (HKJA) "expressed sorrow that officials backed by huge resources targeted an individual" which showed that criticism was not tolerated. it also feared it would further fuel self-censorship. Chris Tang "strongly condemned" the HKJA's claim that the government does not respect the freedom of speech and said Ming Paos decision was "responsible".[13]
It was reported that Zunzi's publications were also taken down in Hong Kong public libraries around 11 May. The Leisure and Cultural Services Department did not confirm the report, but said that "any book with suspected content that may violate national security or Hong Kong laws will be removed immediately for review".[14]
He was married to Chan Ya, a Ming Pao reporter and columnist. The couple had one son Wong Yuet who was born in 2004.[15]