Legality of Cannabis by U.S. Jurisdiction

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Disagree with the page review. Cheung received the annual Hong Kong Book Awards, one of the most notable and renowned literary awards in Hong Kong, and served as the District Councilor of North District, which is an official post. Two personal interviews (from Apple Daily and Radio Free Asia) were included. So I’m pretty sure the article fulfills the notability guideline. While for the sources, I am aware that there are some primary sources, such as from Franco or his wife’s own social m
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{{Infobox writer
{{Infobox writer
|name = Franco Cheung Ching-ho
|name = Franco Cheung Ching-ho

Revision as of 13:11, 28 October 2022

Franco Cheung Ching-ho
Born (1987-01-27) January 27, 1987 (age 37)
Hong Kong
OccupationDistrict councilor, writer, teacher, taxi driver
EducationHong Kong Shue Yan University (BA)
Spouse
(m. 2020)

Franco Cheung Ching-ho (Chinese: 張正皓; born 27 January 1987[1]) is a Hong Kongese writer and former district councilor of the North District Council Fanling South constituency.

Biography

Early life

Cheung was born in Hong Kong on 27 January 1987. He graduated from Hong Kong Shue Yan University with a bachelor's degree in Chinese language and literature.[2] He worked as a cram school Chinese tutor for five years after graduation, before quitting his job and becoming a taxi driver as Cheung wanted to pursue a more free but challenging lifestyle. In 2017, Cheung published Taxi, a prose collection which recorded some of his most memorable incidents as a taxi driver.[3][4] It won the annual Hong Kong Book Awards in lifestyle and encyclopedic category.[5]

Political career

During the early stages of 2019-2020 Hong Kong protests, Cheung was a volunteer driver who would pick up young protestors and drive them home.[4] Cheung was moved by the protestors' courage and persistence and participated in the 2019 Hong Kong local elections as an independent candidate.[6][7] He won the election against Raymond Ho and Almustafa Lee and became the district councilor of Fanling South constituency.[8]

In 2021, he resigned to avoid the mandatory oath-taking requirement after the legislation of Hong Kong national security law.[9][10]

Personal life

Cheung was married to web novelist Wait to be Written in 2020,[11] and they migrated to the United Kingdom in 2021.[10]

Bibliography

  • Taxi (2017) ISBN 978-9-887-79574-2
  • Taxi 2 (2018) ISBN 978-9-887-84901-8
  • Blue Taxi (2021) ISBN 978-9-887-48117-1

References