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Fading out of sight: Hong Kong’s street hawkers are dwindling, ageing, in danger of disappearing

  • Only about 300 hawkers have mobile carts as city authorities have stopped issuing new licences
  • Lawmaker Doreen Kong calls for moves to retain hawkers, as part of Hongkongers’ collective memory

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Au Yuk-hoo, 81, sells socks and stockings in Causeway Bay. Photo: Xiaomei Chen

Around noon every day, 81-year-old Au Yuk-hoo takes her time unpacking her cart, slowly arranging the socks and stockings she sells along bustling Lee Garden Road in Hong Kong’s Causeway Bay.

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Before she was done setting up her stall on a Wednesday, a regular customer stopped to buy three pairs of ankle socks for HK$20 (US$2.50) each.

“I have been selling them for 60 years,” she said.

Au is one of Hong Kong’s last itinerant hawkers. Only about 300 licensed hawkers have mobile carts and, like Au, most are ageing.

Street hawkers were in the news recently, after law enforcement officers confiscated the cart of licensed roasted chestnut seller Chan Tak-ching, 90, in Cheung Sha Wan on March 6.

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