Participants demonstrate Acro Yoga
during the Asia Yoga Conference in Hong Kong June 2, 2007.
[Reuters]
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HONG KONG -- Before 1997, many Hong Kong
people were uncertain what it would be after the city's handover to the
motherland and a large batch of them moved to the overseas, forming an
emigration tide. Ten years past, many were drawn back by the stability and
prosperity of Hong Kong.
Following her parent's will, Renee Chu migrated to Australia in 1990 when she
was still a middle school student. She came back with her family after the
handover and now works as an assistant computer officer in the Chinese
University of Hong Kong.
Renee's parents decided to go overseas in 1989, also moving together were her
two siblings. "At that time, they concerned about Hong Kong's future and wanted
to allow us to receive better education abroad," she told Xinhua in a recent
interview.
After graduating from university, Renee went back in 2000 to Hong Kong where
she believed will offer her better job opportunities, and after all these years
she has settled down her career here.
Hong Kong was hit by economic downturn and outbreak of SARS after 1997, but
that did not stopped the Chu's family from coming back. "There are always good
and bad times for a place," said Renee.
Without involving herself much in current affairs, Renee still pays attention
to Hong Kong's development. Her confidence was further strengthened when seeing
the policies taken place by the Central Government of China in support of Hong
Kong's economy.
Life in Australia is stable and quiet, but it cannot compare with Hong Kong's
vivid and energetic environment. The older generation always yearn for the
lifestyle of their own culture.
"My parents fly back to Australia now and then after coming back," Renee
said, "but the period they stay there becomes shorter, and now they spend more
time in Hong Kong and the mainland. "
Among those emigrants, some showed their confidence in Hong Kong by coming
back long before 1997 came. Native-born Victor Yeh, who migrated to Canada in
the 1980s together with his parents and younger sister, was one of them.
Victor ran a restaurant owned by his family at the beginning and then found a
job himself in the retail industry. Although discrimination did not really
happen to him, Victor said in some occasions immigrants there were inevitably
treated as second-class citizens, for example, "when you look for a job,
employers often entertain native-born people first."
"Canada is an ideal place for leisure life but not career development," said
Victor who went back to Hong Kong in 1993 and started to work in his brother's
trading company.
After the handover, Victor has got more and more business dealing with the
mainland and there he gradually set up his interpersonal network. His company
also sees the mainland as a suitable production base for architectural materials
and invested about 8 million HK dollars (about 1.03 million US dollars) in three
factories there.
When asked if he ever thought of going back to Canada due to the setbacks
Hong Kong experienced after the handover, Victor answered "never" in an definite
tone.
"The mainland is rich in talented people and natural resources, giving
businessman like us great confidence and opportunity," Victor explained.
Victor also said that his parents and sister are now all in Hong Kong simply
because they are happy with the place.