As I see it | Can Hong Kong find a win-win solution for its asylum seekers?

  • When asylum seekers arrive in Hong Kong, they apply to stay temporarily, but even those who succeed are not allowed to work or volunteer
  • Hong Kong should ease these restrictions and instead allow members of this vulnerable community to become assets to the city

Even asylum seekers who manage to stay temporarily in Hong Kong may endure a period of limbo without being able to support themselves. Photo: SCMP Pictures
The number of Hongkongers moving abroad has increased in recent months: couples plan new lives overseas, grandparents wave goodbye to grandchildren, school seats are left vacant. As the city faces unprecedented political and social turbulence, some leave as migrants, others as asylum seekers. It’s heart-wrenching.

On the other hand, many argue, the most underprivileged can hardly consider such options. Among them, there is a group that has long lived at the margins of society: hundreds of asylum seekers mostly from other Asian countries, Africa and the Middle East, often discriminated against and forgotten amid the city’s recent struggles.

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