Hope, heartbreak after Hong Kong court decision on LGBTQ partnerships

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Mr Henry Li looking at a photo of himself and his husband Edgar Ng, who died by suicide in 2020.

Mr Henry Li looking at a photo of himself and his husband Edgar Ng, who died by suicide in 2020.

PHOTO: AFP

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HONG KONG – Wedding photos of Mr Henry Li and Mr Edgar Ng show the couple holding hands, surrounded by beaming friends – the freeze-frame of joy a contrast to the two men’s struggle in Hong Kong for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer (LGBTQ) rights.

Mr Ng launched legal bids in 2019 demanding equal treatment for same-sex couples on public housing and inheritance – a fight continued by his husband after Mr Ng’s suicide in 2020.

The LGBTQ community has seen

incremental legal victories in finance hub Hong Kong

since the mid-2000s, winning in the Chinese city’s courts on targeted issues ranging from visas to taxes.

But same-sex marriage remains out of reach – a painful jolt of reality for Mr Li when the Hong Kong morgue refused to let him identify Mr Ng’s body.

“They were telling me that my husband was not my husband, and that I was nobody,” Mr Li, 37, said.

“I couldn’t react. I froze.”

In a decision in September, Hong Kong’s top court ordered the government to create an “alternative framework” within two years that recognises same-sex couples’ legal rights.

However, the judges also unanimously declared marriage “confined to opposite-sex couples”.

The decision was met with guarded optimism and an undercurrent of grief in the former British colony, according to eight people who spoke to AFP.

Mr Li said he was “a bit disappointed”, but hopes Hong Kong comes up with a framework that covers “growing up, growing old, illness and death”.

Showing photos in his home, Mr Li said that after their 2017 London wedding, Mr Ng insisted they hold a Hong Kong ceremony – even convincing a church to let them walk down the aisle.

“He was a brave person… He rightly said our marriage was open and aboveboard,” Mr Li said.

“More members of Hong Kong’s LGBTQ community are waiting for their rights and identity to be respected.”

‘Needs of the minority’

Semi-autonomous Hong Kong has seen an increasing support for same-sex marriage, a stark contrast to mainland China, where stigma is widespread, and the LGBTQ community has alleged a growing crackdown.

In the case decided in September, prominent activist Jimmy Sham argued that the city’s ban on same-sex marriage violated his right to equality.

“So many people, including Jimmy Sham, have been pushing forward (LGBTQ rights) to where we are today,” said Ms Annie Chau, co-founder of Butterfly, a social network for the lesbian community in Hong Kong.

A photo of Mr Henry Li and his husband Edgar Ng in their apartment at Ma On Shan in Hong Kong.

PHOTO: AFP

Hong Kongers are now more open about their sexual orientation “in their workplaces and families”, she said, adding that Butterfly’s forum topics used to revolve around unpleasant experiences, but recent users talk about marriage, starting families and retirement.

“I think (September’s court decision) is a big improvement,” Ms Chau said.

But the community is not immune to the changing political climate.

Rights advocacy has partly gone underground since Beijing imposed a national security law on Hong Kong in 2020, following huge and sometimes violent pro-democracy protests.

“It’s tougher for the public to see the needs of the minority,” she said, noting the relative lack of media coverage of Sham’s case.

A pro-democracy activist, Sham has been behind bars since 2021 pending trial for alleged national security crimes. He declined to comment.

Mr Angus Leung, who in 2015 challenged the city’s restrictive policies on spousal medical and tax benefits, said he felt Sham’s lawsuit “came too soon”.

Mr Angus Leung challenged Hong Kong's restrictive policies on spousal medical and tax benefits in 2015.

PHOTO: AFP

“Of course, after he filed it, we hoped he would win. But in the end you could see same-sex marriage was dismissed,” he said.

Mr Leung’s case

had a happier ending

– the highest court in 2019 ruled that denying spousal benefits to same-sex couples breached Hong Kong’s anti-discrimination laws.

But the court process was stressful for the couple, who now live abroad.

“We knew that if the outcome was negative, I would become a tool for the government to dismiss future cases,” Mr Leung said.

Double lives

Hong Kong officials have declined to comment on next steps after September’s ruling, while the Department of Justice has asked the court for flexibility on the two-year timeline.

Ben, 53 – who has been with his partner since the 1990s – said he had little confidence Hong Kong’s pro-Beijing legislature would come up with a “reasonable” framework.

Ben said he had little confidence Hong Kong’s pro-Beijing legislature would come up with a “reasonable” framework.

PHOTO: AFP

“Hong Kong still has a long road ahead,” said Ben, using a pseudonym.

For some, progress has come too late.

“There’s no point in coming out now, I’ll keep on pretending. After all, I’ll die soon,” said 76-year-old retiree Pat, who has hidden his two-decade-long relationship from his family.

Pat has hidden his two-decade-long relationship from his family.

PHOTO: AFP

He might have longed for marriage 30 years ago, he added.

“But now I’ve walked such a long road, I’ve adjusted to my life.” AFP

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