Number of sacked Hong Kong civil servants triples in 6 years, with increase attributed to stricter handling of misconduct cases
- Dismissals rose from 21 in 2017-18 financial year to 52 in 2021-22, before reaching 60 in 2022-23
- Secretary for the Civil Service Ingrid Yeung says failure of some civil servants to get fully vaccinated during Covid-19 was another big factor behind increase
The number of Hong Kong civil servants fired from their jobs has nearly tripled over the past six years, with authorities mainly attributing the increase to the stricter handling of serious misconduct cases.
Secretary for the Civil Service Ingrid Yeung Ho Poi-yan told lawmakers on Monday that another reason for the surge in sackings was the failure of some government workers to get fully inoculated as required during the Covid-19 pandemic or provide vaccination medical exemption certificates.
According to a paper the Civil Service Bureau submitted to the Legislative Council, the number of dismissals rose from 21 in the 2017-18 financial year to 52 in 2021-22, before reaching 60 in 2022-23. Another 38 civil servants had been fired during the current financial year, as of December, Yeung added.
“We have become stricter in handling serious misconduct cases,” she said. “When we decide the punishment, we will make reference to the previous similar cases, but it is not necessary for us to follow.”
She added the government required civil servants to either get fully vaccinated before coming to work or provide medical certificates proving they should not receive the jabs.
“But there are a handful of colleagues who did not get jabbed or provide the certificates,” she said.
“They could not go to work as a result and could not offer a good explanation. They were eventually regarded as absconders. We then removed them from office after a certain period of time.”