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ESF - English Schools Foundation
Hong Kong

I’ll emigrate when there’s no more freedom of speech in Hong Kong, says ESF ace pupil

The 16-year-old is disillusioned with Hong Kong's political and social divide

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These English Schools Foundation students earned A* grades in every subject they sat in the General Certificate of Secondary Education exams. They are (clockwise from left) Justin Cheng, Mingyu Yang, Daniel Monteiro, Narumi Wong and Michelle Shen. But there's still room to be disillusioned with life in Hong Kong, according to Justin. Photo: K.Y. Cheng
Shirley Zhao

After a stellar performance in the British and international secondary exams, Justin Cheng Yan-yiu, 16, should be looking forward to a good career and life in his home city.

But the English Schools Foundation pupil, who scored eight straight A*s in the General Certificate of Secondary Education and its international equivalent, says he is so disillusioned with Hong Kong's divided society that he might consider emigrating.

The Year 11 pupil at Sha Tin College was speaking as the foundation announced this year's results in the two examinations in which five pupils achieved A* in every subject they sat. Foundation pupils generally take a mixture of GCSE and International General Certificate of Secondary Education courses.

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Justin said he saw the city's political situation as hopeless, but was against the civil-disobedience movement Occupy Central as it would cause only unrest and chaos. "It just won't work," said Justin, who supports universal suffrage. "It won't force the central government to back down as long as it has an iron grip on Hong Kong."

He said he saw "no civil solution" to Hong Kong's problems such as its divided society and wide wealth gap. "I won't suggest revolution either, because Hong Kong has no military forces," he said. "I think one possible way is through foreign diplomatic talks. Emigration is something I would consider when this place has no freedom of speech any more."

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About 28 per cent of some 1,000 ESF pupils who took the exams scored A* grades, four times Britain's average of 7 per cent, while 94 per cent got A* to C grades, compared with Britain's 68 per cent.

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