Chinese boy’s public urination peeves Hong Kongers
Top Stories
- Trouble mounts for Sreesanth as Mumbai cops gather more evidence
- SIT to seek Supreme Court guidance on Maya Kodnani death penalty issue
- Tamil Nadu police bans Yasin Malik-linked pro-Eelam public meeting
- Kings XI Punjab end IPL 2013 campaign with a win
- Narendra Modi: India losing sheen as agricultural nation
Manners have long been a source of tension in the southern Chinese city, with Hong Kongers routinely complaining about what they see as the unrefined social habits of their "nouveau-riche" mainland counterparts.
The Standard newspaper said the latest incident occurred over the Lunar New Year holiday — a time when mainland tourists flock in large numbers to the former British colony, popular for its shopping.
The mother, who had been enjoying a meal with her family, allowed her son to answer nature's call in a bottle she normally carries for such purposes. "But a female waitress saw us and spoke loudly, saying there is a toilet upstairs," she wrote in an online forum later. She repeated it five times until everyone was staring at me. "My family and I were so depressed thanks to Hong Kongers' discriminating against mainlanders."
But her complaints met with little sympathy in Hong Kong, where locals have expressed a growing unease about their relationship with the mainland and its increasing financial and political clout. The popular HKGolden online forum had hundreds of posts on the issue, with user "Black Flashlight" remarking: "Only dogs will pee everywhere." Another user "FallOutBoy", joked that "each table should have a toilet", while others said the woman should stay away from Hong Kong.
A video of a mainland Chinese girl flouting rules against eating on Hong Kong trains last year drew similarly angry reactions, with mainlanders branded as "locusts" by locals and a Chinese professor calling Hong Kongers "dogs of British colonialists".
The criticisms may be having an effect. Hong Kong's Post magazine reported over the weekend that a school of etiquette is about to open in Beijing, modelled along the lines of Swiss finishing schools.
Founded by Hong Kong businesswoman Sara Jane Ho, the "Institute Sarita" will offer "exclusive clientele lessons in being classy", according to the magazine. Hong Kong maintains a semi-autonomous status since it returned to Chinese rule in 1997, with its own financial and legal system.
Hong Kongers also complain that the influx of mainlanders has strained resources and pushed up prices from baby formula to property.
Editors’ Pick
- Quake-hit and shaken, Bhaderwah spends nights in the open
- UP blast accused dies on way to jail, govt wanted to drop case against him
- Former civil aviation secy changes mind, seeks airport security exemption as EC
- BCCI suspects Gujarat players in other teams were also approached
- Police on money trail, Sreesanth in fresh trouble
- Chhattisgarh 'encounter' leaves 8 villagers dead, no Maoist link yet
- Li arrives today, PM to seek early revival of border talks


US moves troops closer as security worsens in Libya
Panic grips Saudis amid fears of SARS-like virus
India, China to order 100 naval ships each by 2032: report




















