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HK drops push for law protecting mainland Chinese against discrimination

Font size+Author:World Watch news portalSource:business2024-05-01 03:14:17I want to comment(0)

Hong Kong’s equality watchdog has suspended plans for a legal amendment to protect mainland Ch

Hong Kong’s equality watchdog has suspended plans for a legal amendment to protect mainland Chinese from discrimination in the city, saying the situation had improved in recent months.

Linda Lam, the new chairperson of the Equal Opportunities Commission (EOC), said on Thursday when she met the press that the commission did not see any “urgent need” to outlaw intra-racial discrimination.

Tourists on the Peak. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.
Tourists on the Peak. File photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.

“The atmosphere [between mainland Chinese and Hongkongers] is peaceful and harmonious since Hong Kong opened its borders after the pandemic, therefore we do not see any urgent need to legislate against ‘intra-racial’ discrimination,” Lam told reporters in Cantonese. She served in the Department of Justice for 29 years before joining the EOC.

‘Relaxed atmosphere’

Hong Kong has seen heated debate about prejudice and discrimination against mainland Chinese over the past 10 years as more mainland Chinese visited or settled in the city.

Conflicts arose in recent years when some Hong Kong restaurants barred mainland Chinese after the Covid pandemic broke out in mainland China in early 2020, local media reported. Last May, flight attendants from the city’s flagship airline Cathay Pacific were accused of discriminating against Mandarin-speaking passengers.

Equal Opportunities Commission EOC Ricky Chu
Equal Opportunities Commission chair Ricky Chu. Photo: Equal Opportunities Commission.

Chu said when he met the press last Friday before he stepped down as EOC’s chairperson that the commission had introduced some measures against discrimination, such as reaching out to those restaurants and advising them not to ban mainland Chinese visitors.

He said the “atmosphere had been relaxed” in Hong Kong and he felt no regrets about not accomplishing the legislative change.

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