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Report to UN casts doubt on progress of women’s rights in Hong Kong

Lawmakers and 67 local advocacy groups have cast doubt on Hong Kong's progress in meeting its international obligations to improve women's rights.

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Domestic helpers gather in Victoria Park to march in support of Erwiana, the Indonesian maid who was abused by her Hong Kong employer. Photo: David Wong

Lawmakers and 67 local advocacy groups have cast doubt on Hong Kong's progress in meeting its international obligations to improve women's rights.

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The comments came in a report to the United Nations ahead of a review of the city's progress on meeting the provisions of the UN Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women. 

The report was coordinated by the Centre for Comparative and Public Law at the University of Hong Kong and Hong Kong Human Rights Monitor. 

"Hong Kong's progress has been very inadequate, particularly in women's political participation," Democratic Party chairwoman Emily Lau Wai-hing said yesterday ahead of the March 3 to 7 review meeting in Geneva.

In its last review in 2006, the committee overseeing the convention urged Hong Kong to combat domestic and sexual violence, encourage female participation in politics and improve the rights of indigenous women and female asylum seekers.

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It also called for the repeal of the "two-week rule" under which domestic helpers must leave the city after quitting, and expressed concern about long hours and underpayment of helpers.

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