Unions target Cathay Pacific in Hong Kong rally over sacked staff
Trade union members in Hong Kong rallied yesterday against the city’s flagship Cathay Pacific Airways, which has sacked several employees in the past two weeks after coming under pressure from China over their links to prodemocracy protests.
Cathay’s situation encapsulates the very fears that sparked the protests – that China is encroaching on the freedoms and separate legal system that Hong Kong maintains under a “one country, two systems” framework. The Hong Kong Confederation of Trade Unions said that 20 Cathay employees have been dismissed or forced to resign, including pilots, cabin crew, ground staff and managers. It called the rally after Cathay Dragon, a Cathay group airline, fired cabin crew union head Rebecca Sy last week.
Ms Sy, who says she was given no reason for her dismissal, said her firing sends a clear message to the people in Hong Kong that it’s not about whether you break the law but simply whether you are doing what you have been told to do.
“Where is the freedom of speech or democracy?” she said. “Is Hong Kong really dying or is it already dead?”
Cathay CEO Rupert Hogg resigned in mid-august, reportedly pushed out after Chinese pressure on the airline’s main shareholder.
Hundreds of union members rallied in central Hong Kong, holding signs that read “Revoke termination” and “Stop terrorising CX staff,” referring to the airline by its code. Under the slogans, the normally green Cathay logo was coloured red with a golden star added to it, mimicking the Chinese flag.
Cathay has confirmed the dismissal of several employees in the past two weeks. It has given various reasons, such as a pilot who misused company information or another who is in legal proceedings, without mentioning the protests. One Cathay pilot was charged with rioting during a protest. China’s civil aviation authority announced on 9 August that Cathay employees who “support or take part in illegal protests, violent actions, or overly radical behaviour” were banned from staffing flights to mainland China, and that the airline must submit the identification details of crew members flying to the mainland or over mainland airspace for approval.
China’s central government has been sharply critical of the protests, which started in opposition to a now suspended extradition bill that would have allowed suspects to be sent to the mainland to face trial. The protesters’ demands have expanded to include not just withdrawal of the bill but also fully democratic elections for the city’s leader and legislature and an independent investigation into police use of force to break up demonstrations.