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Hong Kong politics
Hong KongPolitics

Tighter civil service disciplinary rules risk becoming excessive: union head

Federation of Civil Service Unions chairman raises concerns over civil servant retention amid efforts to deal with underperforming staff

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A union leader has cautioned that increasing pressure on frontline staff could further strain morale, particularly among younger recruits. Photo: Elson Li
Wynna WongandFiona Sun

The head of a civil service union federation in Hong Kong has warned that tighter disciplinary action risks becoming excessive as the government seeks to revise the penalty system to handle underperforming employees this year.

Leung Chau-ting, chairman of the Federation of Civil Service Unions, was responding to the Civil Service Bureau’s plan to revise the regulations to further improve the disciplinary mechanism, including tightening rules on withholding salaries during suspensions and confiscating withheld pay.

Responding to a lawmaker’s inquiry, the bureau said it aimed to implement the revised Public Service (Administration) Order and the Public Service (Disciplinary) Regulation this year.

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It also revealed that 151 civil servants were dismissed for serious misconduct or criminal offences between 2022 and 2025, with the number of dismissals dropping steadily from 60 in 2022-23 to 51 in 2023-24 and 40 in 2024-25.

Of the total, 73 were dismissed for criminal offences and 78 for misconduct. Dismissals among police officers were the highest at 44.

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Leung told the South China Morning Post that tighter disciplinary action risked becoming excessive, with some supervisors acting aggressively under pressure to meet headcount reduction targets.

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