- Hawker Chan Tak-ching surrounded by dozens of law enforcement officers in Cheung Sha Wan after she briefly handed over cart to a relative to take a toilet break
- Food and Environmental Hygiene Department officer tells Chan she will be prosecuted amid row
Authorities have confiscated a roasted chestnut cart from a visibly shaken 90-year-old authorised street hawker in Hong Kong after she left the stall temporarily for a toilet break, leaving it to a non-licensed relative in her absence.
The dramatic altercation between hawker Chan Tak-ching and dozens of law enforcement officers in Cheung Sha Wan drew more than a hundred onlookers at one point, with the woman collapsing after being told her cart, which she said had provided an income for decades, would be taken away.
“I have my licence with me now. Don’t accuse us of hawking illegally. I was just away for a while,” she cried out, while sitting on the ground and pleading with police.
How Covid-19 pandemic and Hong Kong’s labour policies have led to city’s growing income inequality
A man in his 30s, who claimed he was Chan’s relative and looking after the cart temporarily, was taken away by police.
The row broke out at around 8pm when Chan’s cart selling roasted chestnuts, sweet potatoes and quail eggs outside Cheung Sha Wan MTR station was surrounded by officers from the Food and Environmental Hygiene Department.
An SCMP reporter saw a female department officer warning the hawker, who said she was returning from a toilet break, that she would be prosecuted.
“I saw a non-licence holder hawking at this ‘black spot’ … I was already here for 25 minutes waiting for you to come back,” she said.
Hong Kong’s richest make 47 times more than poorest, says Oxfam
The hawker replied: “I needed 10 minutes to walk to the closest toilet in a nearby shopping centre, and another 10 minutes to return.
“Can you please give me a penalty ticket instead of confiscating my cart?”
Officers called for backup when the elderly woman said she intended to stay with her cart. About a dozen officers arrived and cordoned off the area. A male officer warned her over obstructing them in the execution of their duties.
She collapsed against the wall and said: “I beg you to give me a chance. I have relied on it for making a living for decades.”
Police officers also warned bystanders against causing a breach of social peace. They also obstructed the SCMP reporter who was taking video.
After the man and the cart were taken away, Chan showed her valid itinerant hawker licence to the SCMP, which specified that she was allowed to sell “roasted chestnuts” from a mobile cart.
Minimum wage in Hong Kong to ‘rise by HK$2.50 to HK$40 per hour in May’ after 4-year freeze
“As I cannot transfer my licence to anyone else, I just hope to stand on my own feet by hawking,” she said.
In a bid to comfort Chan, a man came over and offered her HK$1,000 in cash. Rebuffing her refusal, he said this was to “buy all the chestnuts she had”.
The SCMP has approached police and the department for comment.