Homeless People Win Lawsuit Against Govt

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

Related News Programmes

"); });

2022-03-29 HKT 19:49

Share this story

facebook

  • Each claimant was awarded HK$100 for their losses in their lawsuit against the government. Photo: RTHK

    Each claimant was awarded HK$100 for their losses in their lawsuit against the government. Photo: RTHK

A group of homeless people on Tuesday won a lawsuit against the government over the authorities' decision to remove their belongings from the streets more than two years ago, with each of them to be awarded a nominal HK$100 for their losses.

The Small Claims Tribunal heard that riot police and staff from the Leisure and Cultural Services Department (LCSD) carried out a clearance operation on December 21, 2019 to evict the street sleepers living in Tung Chau Street Park in Sham Shui Po.

It heard that authorities had ordered the homeless to collect their belongings within three minutes, but most of those who lived in the park were not there at the time.

Nine claimants had told the tribunal that LCSD staff had put their belongings in a nearby garbage truck for their collection afterwards, and threw away the uncollected items a few days later.

The claimants each asked for HK$2,000 to around HK$13,000 dollars in damages for their alleged losses.

Handing down his judgement, adjudicator Arthur Lam said the Department of Justice, representing the LCSD, had failed to prove that the authorities had provided due care to the claimants' items, adding that their practice could not be considered prudent.

He ordered the LCSD to pay each claimant a nominal HK$100 in damages. Both parties were ordered to afford their own legal costs.

Ng Wai-tung from the Society for Community Organisation, who's been helping the claimants, said several other homeless people who had earlier taken part in the lawsuit either passed away or were no longer contactable.

One of the nine claimants, surnamed Chiu, had died earlier this month after catching Covid, Ng said.

He also urged the government to formulate friendly policies towards the homeless and set up a dedicated department to follow up on their complaints.

RECENT NEWS

Circle CEO Says China Could Launch Yuan Stablecoin In 3 To 5 Years As Trade Grows

Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire predicts that China could roll out a yuan stablecoin within three to five years to expand the... Read more

Naver IPO Timeline Set As Dunamu Merger Targets Nasdaq Debut

Preparations for a Naver IPO are underway following an agreement between Naver Financial and cryptocurrency exchange op... Read more

TransUnion Urges Lenders To Rethink Credit Risk For Gig Workers In Hong Kong

TransUnion is urging lenders to update their risk assessment models, revealing that gig workers in Hong Kong exhibit st... Read more

Citi And Endowus Roll Out HK$4,000 Wealth-Linked Credit Card Campaign

Citi and digital wealth platform Endowus have launched a joint credit card promotion in Hong Kong, expanding the Citi E... Read more

Aspire Secures SFC License In Hong Kong To Launch SME Yield Product

Singapore-headquartered fintech Aspire has secured three financial licenses from the Securities and Futures Commission ... Read more

Why Stablecoins May Become The Backbone Of 24/7 Global Trade

Stablecoin transaction volumes surged 72% in 2025, reaching a record US$33 trillion and signalling growing institutiona... Read more