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Hard times for Hong Kong’s tourism workers as protests keep visitors away – ‘I am in despair’

  • Workers in protest-hit travel and dining sectors in constant state of worry over employment as fewer visitors see closures of restaurants and shops
  • The jobless rate crept up to 3.1 per cent in the three months to October, from 2.9 per cent in the previous quarter

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The tourism slump ­happened as the protests became regular and increasingly violent. Photo: K.Y. Cheng

 

Tour guide Chau Ching is worried. Her income has been reduced to zero, after the city’s anti-government protests hit tourism hard and mainland Chinese tourists stopped coming.

For more than 10 years, the 49-year-old single mother earned a living by showing mainland Chinese visitors around. In a good month, she took home more than HK$20,000 (US$2,550).

But since August, she has not led a single tour group.

“I am in despair,” says Chau, who supports a 20-year-old daughter in Form Five in Hong Kong, as well as her elderly parents across the border in Shenzhen.

Chau Ching says she has taken part-time sales work paying about HK$90 per hour. Photo: Jonathan Wong
Chau Ching says she has taken part-time sales work paying about HK$90 per hour. Photo: Jonathan Wong

“I long to go back to my job, but I don’t know when I can return to my normal life. I am under tremendous pressure.”

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