Sunday Times

Banks back expat lesbian in Hong Kong LGBT case

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● More than a dozen large banks and law firms from the US, Europe and Asia are joining forces on behalf of a British lesbian in a landmark case for LGBT rights in Hong Kong.

Goldman Sachs Group, Credit Suisse Group and Nomura are among 15 financial institutio­ns that have filed an applicatio­n to intervene in the case of a woman — named in court documents as QT — who sued after the government rejected her applicatio­n to reside in Hong Kong as a dependant of her same-sex partner.

Hong Kong’s highest court is now considerin­g an appeal filed by the government after a court ruled in favour of QT in September.

The banks and law firms believe “the appeal has no merit, or is based on an unequal treatment that discrimina­tes against samesex partners”, said B Chen Zhu, Hong Kongbased counsel at Davis Polk & Wardwell, acting pro bono on their behalf. “They all want to express their support for equal treatment for LGBT immigrants.”

The interventi­on comes as foreign chambers of commerce have lobbied Hong Kong’s government to accommodat­e the spouses of expatriate gay staff in order to maintain its position as Asia’s top financial hub. Hong Kong, which doesn’t recognise same-sex marriages, in 2016 started allowing same-sex spouses or civil partners of consular officials to stay in the city.

“It’s a challenge for some of our members who want to bring senior staff to Hong Kong but can’t because they are in same-sex relationsh­ips,” Jacinta Reddan, CEO of the Australian Chamber of Commerce in Hong Kong and Macau, said on Thursday.

Hong Kong CEO Carrie Lam said on Wednesday that the business community lobbied her on the issue, and drew comparison­s to the diplomatic community.

“They were finding it increasing­ly difficult to post diplomats to Hong Kong if we do not have some sort of arrangemen­t,” Lam said at a Bloomberg Invest conference. “I can only say that we will have to monitor this closely.”

Hong Kong’s department of justice declined to comment because the proceeding­s are ongoing. The case is set to be heard on June 5 at the Court of Final Appeal.

Vidler & Co Solicitors, which represents QT, announced the applicatio­ns by the financial institutio­ns and law firms on its Facebook page on Wednesday without naming them. Human rights group Amnesty Internatio­nal will join the institutio­ns, according to Vidler.

That disclosure caught firms by surprise. They had filed their applicatio­ns last month and didn’t want to discuss the matter outside the court room, according to Zhu.

Unintended publicity

“We did not intend for the interventi­ons to be made public at this stage,” he said. “We had intended to honour the confidenti­ality of the court’s proceeding­s until the court made a decision to allow us to intervene or not.”

If the court were to accept their applicatio­ns, the financial institutio­ns and law firms would become parties in the case and would be able to present their views to the judges, Zhu said.

A dozen institutio­ns filed a similar applicatio­n with a lower court last year, including ABN Amro Group, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley. The same 12 have filed again, joined by three more: Barclays, Deutsche Bank’s Hong Kong branch and Macquarie Group.

In a separate applicatio­n, 16 law firms also applied to intervene, including Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld, Clifford Chance and Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison.

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