The Mercury News

Cathay Pacific workers feel China’s pressure

Beijing monitoring online activity of airline’s employees

- By Tiffany May and Ezra Cheung

HONG KONG » Mixe Lee’s bosses showed him two Facebook posts. One criticized the police for how they handled the anti-government demonstrat­ions that have rocked the city of Hong Kong since June. Their question for Lee, a Cathay Pacific Airways flight attendant: Did he write them?

Lee denied it, though he had. Then last Thursday, a week after the interrogat­ion, he joined the ranks of those fired by Cathay Pacific after expressing political views that could anger the Chinese government.

“I had never thought that the company would pick on my political orientatio­n,” said Lee, 30, who had worked at the carrier’s Cathay Dragon regional airline for 3½ years.

Cathay Pacific is fighting for its survival, and its employees risk becoming collateral damage. The Hong Kong-based airline is perhaps the most vulnerable of the global businesses caught between the city’s pro-democracy protesters and a Chinese government that has labeled them violent radicals. China wants the business world to take its side, and it is threatenin­g to withhold access to its big and growing market

from companies that don’t.

Beijing has threatened to close off Chinese airspace to Cathay unless it contains its employees. But many of Cathay’s 26,000 Hong Kongbased employees sympathize with the protesters.

The result is what many in Cathay call “the white terror,” a name that harks back to Taiwan’s bloody antiCommun­ist crackdown in past decades. Nearly two dozen current and former employees described an atmosphere of fear. Many are deactivati­ng their social media accounts, or changing the photos on their profiles so that their managers won’t recognize them.

“You can feel the distance between colleagues,” said Jack Tung, a 32-year-old Cathay Pacific purser who also serves as a first aid provider during Hong Kong’s protests. “I can’t trust those whom I don’t know because I’m not sure whether they would report me to management. It’s like a ‘the Big Brother is watching you’ scenario, especially when you are in the air.”

Those who fly to China say they face even more scrutiny from Chinese air officials, who comb planes after they land for foreign publicatio­ns that cover the protests and put employees through onerous screening.

It is not clear how many employees have been fired or suspended. Cathay Pacific did not respond to several requests for comment. In previous statements, it condemned violent protests, expressed support for Hong Kong’s government and police force and said it had no choice but to comply with Chinese safety directives.

“We have been Hong Kong’s home carrier for many decades,” a recent statement said. “This is our home. We have grown with this great city and are committed to remaining at the heart of its future growth and success.”

On Wednesday, citing a drop in August traffic, Cathay said it would trim its growth plans. The problems could continue. While city leaders have canceled a bill that would have allowed extraditio­ns of criminal suspects to the mainland, a catalyst for the protests, they have continued over other problems.

Hong Kong’s protests and Beijing’s growing willingnes­s to intercede in the city’s affairs could profoundly change how people work and do business in the Asian financial capital. Cathay, for example, is controlled by Swire Pacific, one of a handful of conglomera­tes that can trace their history to Hong Kong’s early British colonial era, and have long been dominated by non-Chinese executives. Because it depends so much on business in China, it faces growing pressure to show its loyalty.

“If they want to gain better access to the Chinese market to do business better and easier, foreign companies want to satisfy the nationalis­tic preference­s to the extent they can,” said Zhiwu Chen, a professor of economics at the University of Hong Kong. “Given that background, native Chinese executives are more likely to develop better personal connection­s on the mainland, either with officials or with other business executives.”

Last month, as Beijing piled pressure on the airline,

the company named Augustus Tang, a 60-year-old longtime Cathay and Swire employee, as its new chief executive, replacing Rupert Hogg, the British-born executive who had led the company for only two years.

Cathay also sent a strong message to employees that public support for the protests would not be tolerated. Managers recirculat­ed company guidelines that call for workers to blow the whistle on one another. It fired a pilot who had been arrested during a protest and fired two staff members who were accused of leaking the personal travel details of Hong Kong police officers who were traveling to the mainland for a soccer event, a disclosure that angered Chinese media amid doxxing accusation­s on both sides.

Tensions worsened in recent days after three flights originatin­g in Hong Kong were found to be carrying depleted oxygen bottles, which would be used by cabin crews if a plane depressuri­zed, raising questions in local news media over whether sabotage was the cause. Cathay said it had suspended the cabin crews involved and was investigat­ing the incidents.

“The company used to teach us about teamwork,” said Katherine Sin, a 36-year-old flight attendant for nine years. “Our motto was ‘People. They make an airline.’ But now everyone is stabbing other people in the back.”

Sin said Cathay managers had called her into their offices at Cathay City, the

company’s glassy complex near Hong Kong’s airport, two weeks after Hogg’s resignatio­n. They showed her screenshot­s of her Facebook and Instagram accounts criticizin­g the police, including one that said, “If at this point you still support the government and the police, I don’t think you can call yourself a human.” All the posts were made before Hogg resigned, she said.

Sin denied the accounts were hers, though they were. She believed that she would be immediatel­y fired if she admitted to them, she said, and that she had not violated company policy. She was fired last Thursday.

“I dedicated myself to the company,” Sin said. “I loved my company. I used to say proudly to other people that I was a stewardess from Cathay Pacific. But now I can’t say that anymore. I’m too heartbroke­n.”

Several Cathay employees asked for anonymity for fear of reprisal. Many employees said they would have a difficult time finding similar jobs elsewhere. Departing workers would have to take their chances with a foreign airline, a regional airline or one of China’s state-run carriers.

Tung, the purser, did not ask for anonymity. He said he expected to be fired for talking publicly about Cathay’s problems. The risk, he said, was worth it.

“I hope that by making public what’s happening to the company, I can protect my colleagues,” Tung said. “If I don’t have the right to talk freely, then what use is this job?”

 ?? LAM YIK FEI — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Mixe Lee, a flight attendant for Cathay Pacific Airways, was fired over Facebook posts that were sympatheti­c to Hong Kong’s pro-democracy protesters as the airline axes workers who express political views.
LAM YIK FEI — THE NEW YORK TIMES Mixe Lee, a flight attendant for Cathay Pacific Airways, was fired over Facebook posts that were sympatheti­c to Hong Kong’s pro-democracy protesters as the airline axes workers who express political views.
 ?? LAM YIK FEI — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Mixe Lee, who was fired from Cathay Pacific, describes a culture of fear as managers fire some who have made social media posts supporting Hong Kong’s protests.
LAM YIK FEI — THE NEW YORK TIMES Mixe Lee, who was fired from Cathay Pacific, describes a culture of fear as managers fire some who have made social media posts supporting Hong Kong’s protests.

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