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My Hong Kong | Forget ‘Hello Hong Kong’, are we ‘Heartless Hong Kong’ after elderly woman hawker debacle?

  • The case of a 90-year-old licensed street hawker devastated at having her cart confiscated by food and hygiene officers risks putting the city in a bad light
  • That’s not fair to our mostly hospitable and welcoming people, and the city certainly has its heart in the right place. We just need to open it up more often

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Ninety-year-old licensed street hawker Chan Tak-ching cries after having her roast chestnut trolley confiscated. Photo: Natalie Wong

Media attention in Hong Kong last week was riveted not by the government’s ambitious new tourism campaign, but images of a distraught elderly woman writhing on the ground, begging for mercy from some food and hygiene officers.

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Ninety-year-old licensed street hawker Chan Tak-ching is no hardened criminal. She sells roasted chestnuts outside a subway station. Her “crime” was to allow an unauthorised person tend to her cart while she popped to the toilet.

“I beg you to give me a chance,” the old lady pleaded.

Her heart-wrenching cry was soon being aired on numerous news platforms, and discussed on radio talk shows, across the city.

At one point a dozen law enforcement representatives were called to the scene as Chan, imploring hygiene officers to give her a penalty ticket, collapsed to the ground when told, instead, her cart would be confiscated.

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