Ethnic Minorities Face Hostility At Work: Poll

"); jQuery("#212 h3").html("

Related News Programmes

"); });

2021-05-22 HKT 14:55

Share this story

facebook

  • Ethnic minorities responding to a survey say they still suffer from different kinds of discrimination at the workplace and a lack opportunities. File photo: RTHK

    Ethnic minorities responding to a survey say they still suffer from different kinds of discrimination at the workplace and a lack opportunities. File photo: RTHK

A charity focused on inclusivity on Saturday urged the government and employers to set up mentorship programmes for ethnic minorities, after a majority of respondents to its survey said they had faced hostile or unfriendly treatment at the workplace.

The NGO, Treats, surveyed nearly 140 ethnic minority adults in Hong Kong, and 40 percent of the respondents reported being treated with unreasonable hostility at work.

The respondents also said they faced unfriendly remarks over their race, culture and outfits, with one saying she was asked not to "frighten people" after her boss in a five-star hotel banned her from wearing a hijab.

Apart from discrimination, many of those polled reported of a lack of job and promotion opportunities, with more than 30 percent saying that they had experience of not being interviewed despite fulfilling all the requirements in a job opening.

"Most of the Hong Kong people have many misunderstandings and stereotyping of our ethnic minorities friends," said Mable Lo, the head of service at Treats.

The organisation also polled more than 600 Chinese locals and found that more than a fifth of them said it was normal for Hong Kong employers not to hire ethnic minorities.

A small portion of the Chinese locals polled even said ethnic minorities should not live in Hong Kong because of their vastly different culture and habits.

Lo noted that the government has different programmes to support ethnic minorities, but more should be done.

"Our organisation found that it is very important to break their stereotyping by some direct contact," she said.

"Therefore we have some mentorship schemes, the schemes can provide them more chances to have more direct contact before they really enter the job market."

Treats also called on businesses to set up more inclusive policies and recommended the government work with NGOs to provide seminars, workshops and media campaigns for employers to better understand ethnic minorities.

RECENT NEWS

ZA Bank Brings Nasdaq Data To Hong Kong, Expanding US Stock Access And Investor Education

ZA Bank and Nasdaq have announced a collaboration aimed at enhancing digital wealth management in Hong Kong and interna... Read more

Hong Kong To Study One‑Stop Infrastructure For Equities, Bonds And Digital Assets

The Hong Kong Monetary Authority’s (HKMA) CMU OmniClear and the Hong Kong Exchange (HKEX) are set to begin a study on... Read more

Hong Kong To Issue First Stablecoin Licenses In March, Expand Crypto Regulation

Hong Kong will issue its first licenses for fiat-referenced stablecoin issuers in March and introduce new legislation l... Read more

MSIG Joins US$6B IFC Credit Insurance Facility To Boost Emerging Market Lending

MSIG USA and Mitsui Sumitomo Insurance (MSI Japan), together referred to as MSIG, have joined a new insurance-ba... Read more

Why The $2 Trillion Stablecoin Prediction Is Too Low

McKinsey estimates the stablecoin market will hit $2 trillion by 2028. But according to Sam Lin, COO of dtcpay, even th... Read more

RedotPay Eyes US IPO With Potential US$1 Billion Raise

RedotPay is reportedly exploring an IPO in the US that could raise more than US$1 billion, according to people famili... Read more