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Hong Kong

Hong Kong happiness index at lowest since 2003 amid government scandals

HKU index hits May low since 2003, as top officials find themselves in trouble and activists divide over this year's June 4 protest

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Protesters surround Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying's car as it left a seminar in Tseung Kwan O on May 16. Photo: Dickson Lee
Amy Nip

An index tracking how happy Hongkongers are with the city and its government has fallen to its lowest May level since 2003 - the year in which seething anti-government sentiment led to a 500,000-strong protest march.

The Public Sentiment Index - compiled by the University of Hong Kong's public opinion programme to gauge the likelihood of collective action by the populace - fell last month to 72.9, the lowest since May 2003 when it was 72.1. In July that year, the index fell to its lowest, 63.8, in a month that saw the biggest protest since the handover.

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A political commentator said sentiment in the latest study was dragged down by scandals involving top public figures. But with activists divided, the effect on next week's annual June 4 rally was uncertain.

The index comprises two parts: people's appraisal of the city's governance, and their appraisal of political, economic and social aspects. Various monthly polls by HKU are also factored into the index. The overall score ranges between 0 and 200, with 100 meaning normal.

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"The reading for late May has slightly rebounded compared with early May," programme research manager Winnie Lee Wing-yi said.

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