Britain | BNO visas

Britain is a home but not a haven for Hong Kongers

Life is not easy for a very distinctive group of immigrants

A demonstrator was seen carrying a yellow umbrella with "Hong Kong" written on it during the demonstration. Manchester, UK.
A need for shelterPhotograph: Getty Images
|Manchester

WHEN ALEX Mak was asked to swear an oath of loyalty to Hong Kong’s government in 2020, he decided to leave. The 37-year-old civil servant had taken part in street protests the year before, when some 2m Hong Kongers had demonstrated against a proposed law enabling extradition to mainland China. Since then life in Hong Kong had become even more “suffocating”, he said. In 2021 he got his opportunity, and moved to Britain under a visa scheme opened to Hong Kongers that year. Like most of the 200,000 or so newcomers to have arrived under this scheme, he is highly educated and speaks excellent English. Yet integration has not been easy.

Explore more

This article appeared in the Britain section of the print edition under the headline “A home, not a haven”

From the July 20th 2024 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

Discover more

Someone with their eyes blindfolded

Are British voters as clueless as Labour’s intelligentsia thinks? 

How the idea of false consciousness conquered the governing party

A nurse attending to a pateient behind curtains, the light coming through the blinds

Blighty newsletter: Starmer’s silence puts the assisted-dying bill at risk


The best British companies to work for to get ahead

A new ranking of firms by pay, promotions and hiring practices


How the best British employers find and promote their staff

No degree? Some employers care much less than others

A tiny island fights the scourge of plastic on the beach

A Northern Irish experiment in recycling

A sticking-plaster policy for Britain’s strained courts

Magistrates get more power. Will they get punch-drunk on it?