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Inclusiveness in Hong Kong should go beyond token gestures
Inclusiveness in Hong Kong should go beyond token gestures

South China Morning Post

time4 days ago

  • Politics
  • South China Morning Post

Inclusiveness in Hong Kong should go beyond token gestures

Feel strongly about these letters, or any other aspects of the news? Share your views by emailing us your Letter to the Editor at letters@ or filling in this Google form . Submissions should not exceed 400 words, and must include your full name and address, plus a phone number for verification The letter , 'Ethnic minorities in Hong Kong: how community centres can foster integration' (August 5), rightly questions whether the city has done enough to build a robust multicultural environment. True integration, however, requires more than symbolic gestures; dismantling the systemic barriers faced by non-Chinese residents demands structural reforms. Hong Kong's demographic diversity is too often oversimplified. While 91.6 per cent of the population is ethnically Chinese, the remaining 8.4 per cent encompasses communities with deep roots – some that can be traced back to the colonial era – as well as newer arrivals. A blanket label like 'ethnic minorities' flattens varied experiences and perpetuates stereotypes about non-Chinese groups, South Asian heritage or lower socioeconomic status. This risks turning diversity into a problem to be managed, rather than seeing it as an asset to be embraced. The 2021 Population Census reveals telling residential patterns: non-Chinese groups are concentrated in districts like Yau Tsim Mong and Central and Western. History explains some of this clustering. South Asians deployed to Hong Kong as colonial-era police and soldiers settled near barracks, creating enclaves such as Yuen Long's Nepali community and Central's Muslim cluster. Economic factors further shape these patterns, with low-income families crowding into older neighbourhoods and so on.

What is happening in Ballymena? North Ireland riots explained
What is happening in Ballymena? North Ireland riots explained

The Independent

time11-06-2025

  • The Independent

What is happening in Ballymena? North Ireland riots explained

Two nights of violence erupted in Ballymena, Northern Ireland, following an alleged sexual assault, with rioters attacking police with petrol bombs, bricks, and fireworks. Protesters set fire to houses, cars, a car wash, and a tyre centre, leading police to respond with plastic baton rounds and water cannons; 15 officers were injured on Monday and 17 on Tuesday. Ethnic minorities appeared to be targeted during the unrest, prompting some residents to display signs indicating their nationalities. Five people have been arrested for riotous behaviour, and a 29-year-old man was charged; police are investigating the "racially motivated disorder." The Prime Minister 's spokesman and the Northern Ireland Secretary condemned the violence, emphasising there is no justification for attacks on police or vandalism.

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