农行浙江省分行营业部全力服务农业供给侧改革
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Slavery may have been outlawed in the 19th century but it still exists openly in Hong Kong to this day, writes Jason Wordie.

Hong Kong has had a lengthy – and mostly honorable – involvement with human trafficking issues. The Letters Patent and Royal Instructions, the British charter that created the original Hong Kong government in 1843, specified that Chinese customary practices were to be protected in the new colony wherever possible with the stated exception of slavery and torture.
Human trafficking was commonplace from the mid-19th century onwards. The regional epicentre for this trade, which extended from Southeast Asia to Peru, was Macau. Smaller and more vulnerable to influence from its massive neighbour than Hong Kong, and burdened – much like today – with a weak administration and a more corrupt legal system, Macau saw many thousands of poverty-stricken Chinese trapped, tricked and exported into conditions of virtual slavery.
SEE ALSO: Hong Kong 'a hot-bed for modern day slavery'
Hong Kong’s colonial authorities, in tandem with global British policy, did whatever they could to help stop human trafficking, including having the Royal Navy capture slave ships. The Po Leung Kuk, established here in 1878, initially regulated the emigration of women and children, and ensured that those who departed China through Hong Kong, for new lives abroad, were leaving of their own free will. By the 1930s, the Kuk’s role had evolved into the protection of euphemistically named mui tsai (“little sisters”), or underage bondservants.
Sadly, much has changed.
Obvious victims of Hong Kong’s current human trafficking epidemic are the growing legions of terribly disabled mainlanders who “work” here as beggars.
Putonghua-speaking upperbody double amputees, with begging bowls and scrawled placards detailing their sad personal stories, have proliferated in recent years. Hidden in plain sight, these unfortunates can be seen all over Hong Kong, whatever the weather, every day of the year.