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Beijing's help sought for Hong Kong trade deal with Asean

Exclusion from Southeast Asian bloc's pact with China leaves the city's ports business vulnerable

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Tung Chee-chen, the chairman of Hong Kong's biggest container line Orient Overseas (International) Ltd.

Hong Kong should seek help from Beijing to join the Asean-China free-trade agreement, amid warnings that exclusion from the region's biggest free-trade network would harm the city's port terminals.

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Tung Chee-chen, the chairman of Hong Kong's biggest container line Orient Overseas (International) Ltd (OOIL) and a member of the Hong Kong Port Development Council, said the 10-nation Asean bloc was increasingly shipping cargo directly to mainland ports instead of through Hong Kong since the start of the 10+1 trade pact in 2010.

"Since the setting up of the free-trade area, cargo from Asean countries entering China through Hong Kong must present a certificate to prove its origin before it can enjoy tax exemption," Tung said.

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"Shippers who found that cumbersome have stopped coming to Hong Kong."

Secretary for Commerce and Economic Development Greg So Kam-leung said earlier this year that the Association of Southeast Asian Nations had agreed to pursue free-trade talks with Hong Kong. But instead of making Hong Kong a member of the established China-Asean network, the 10 nations - including Singapore and the Philippines - it agreed only to explore co-operation on a bilateral basis.

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