- Alex Tsui always wanted to be one of the city’s top chefs, now he’s the chairman of the Hong Kong Hotel Employees Union
- At least 24 trade unions have been established this year – almost double the 13 formed in 2018, according to official figures
At 14, Alex Tsui had a very clear career goal " he wanted to train at a three-star Michelin restaurant in France and become one of Hong Kong's top chefs.
Fast forward 10 years, and the 24-year-old has already spent five years working in a local luxury hotel at a two-star Michelin restaurant, and even started to learn French this year. Everything appeared to going smoothly for Tsui " until the extradition bill protests erupted in June, eventually prompting him to put his dreams aside to devote himself to what became the anti-government movement.
"What's the point of becoming an exceptional chef if the authorities have suppressed my hometown and turned it into a totally unrecognisable place?" he told the Post.
Last month, Tsui became the first chairman of the Hong Kong Hotel Employees Union he co-founded with dozens of his fellow industry workers, most of whom he met on encrypted messaging channel Telegram.
The secondary school graduate also decided to take English lessons to prepare for any public speeches he may have to make in the future, although with the union in its infancy, it has fewer than 200 members.
Tsui's union was one of the many Hongkongers set up as the protests " triggered by the now-withdrawn extradition bill " drag on into their seventh month, with many hoping to increase pressure on the government by organising large-scale strikes.
As of last week, at least 24 trade unions had been established this year " almost double the 13 in 2018, according to Labour Department figures.
That included Hong Kong White Collar (Administration and Clerical) Connect Union, Hong Kong Construction and Engineering Employees General Union, Hong Kong Information Technology Workers' Union and Hospital Authority Employees Alliance.
Dozens of other trade unions from across a wide range of industries, including optometry, dental, bartending, and even beauticians are understood to be in the pipeline.
Most hotel workers in Hong Kong having to take unpaid leave as occupancy rates take hit from ongoing protests, survey finds
Tsui said these new groups had been working closely with each other and had hoped to change Hongkongers' perceptions of trade unions.
"We want to introduce a new culture that trade unions are not just about labour rights " they could also consolidate the voices of the industries to resist the authorities," Tsui said.
He said he believed radical protest, while occasionally necessary, had reached a bottleneck, and argued there was a need to consolidate millions of Hongkongers to fight the long-term battle and force the government to address their demands.
A real strike with no time limit was an option, he said.
At least three rounds of citywide strikes have taken place in Hong Kong since August, but they were all focused on causing disruption to traffic and transport infrastructure over a short period of time.
Stanley Tsang, vice-chairman of Hong Kong Hotel Employees Union, said while the city's residents had already evolved to become more active in protests over the past several months, it was unlikely a powerful strike would happen in the short term.
More preparation had to be done, the 31-year-old sales and marketing worker said, adding their union had recruited some 130 members within a month, in a sector estimated to have 40,000 workers, and which already has a union affiliated to the Federation of Trade Unions.
Tsui said a strike would only succeed if workers did it from the heart, not because they were forced to by traffic disruptions.
"Trade unions, therefore, have a responsibility to promote the idea and educate the public," he said. "The more people that take part, the safer it would be for everyone."
Veteran unionist Mung Siu-tat, of the pro-democracy Hong Kong Confederation of Trade Unions, said the group had been offering help and advice to people from almost 50 trades, and called the phenomenon a "citywide political awakening".
He said the confederation's call for people to set up their unions had never been popular in Hong Kong, as many " especially the middle-class " still held the perception that such platforms were only for blue-collar workers to handle disputes with employers.
"But the political tide has changed it," Mung said. "Many people who tried to form unions are actually professionals."
Copyright (c) 2019. South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.
留言 8
西營盤
Alex Tsui: "What's the point of becoming an exceptional chef if the authorities have suppressed my hometown and turned it into a totally unrecognisable place?"
The fact: "What's the point of becoming a leader of an Union supporting the destruction of your hometown and turning it into a totally unrecognisable place?"
2019年12月26日05:33
wilfred
If spend 10yrs or above in prison, what they will think then?
2019年12月26日05:43
This Alex Tsui is full of bullshit being a masked rioter and a paid dog traitor is what he us now thinking he can earn more fqst money this way hope he will be shot dead next time he goes rioting or die in jail when caught
No mercy for all these hooligans rascals triads linked black masked cockroach rioters
Drport Jimmy Lau , Albert Ho , Vietnamese bitch Ho Wan Sze , Claudia Mo , Matin Lee , Chu Hoi Dik , Anson Chan with property and bank accounts seized
Support Hong Kong Police
2019年12月26日06:01
Blue K
Hk rubbish💩💩💩you’re never representing 7 millions HK citizen......曱甴時代🧟♀️🧟♂️唯禍人間,神憎鬼厭👊🏻
2019年12月26日08:02
craig
自作自受
2019年12月26日07:00
顯示全部