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  • ✇Hong Kong Free Press HKFP
  • Trans alum sues former secondary school over ‘discriminatory’ hair policies Hillary Leung
    A transgender alum has sued her former secondary school over “discriminatory” policies that barred her from having long hair. Lung Kung World Federation School Limited (LKWFSL) Lau Wong Fat Secondary School in Tai Kok Tsui. Photo: LKWFSL Lau Wong Fat Secondary School. Oscar Fung, who studied at Lung Kung World Federation School Limited (LKWFSL) Lau Wong Fat Secondary School in Tai Kok Tsui from 2019 to 2025, filed a writ in the District Court on Thursday, local media reported. Accordin
     

Trans alum sues former secondary school over ‘discriminatory’ hair policies

5 May 2026 at 23:30
School discrimination

A transgender alum has sued her former secondary school over “discriminatory” policies that barred her from having long hair.

Lung Kung World Federation School Limited (LKWFSL) Lau Wong Fat Secondary School in Tai Kok Tsui.
Lung Kung World Federation School Limited (LKWFSL) Lau Wong Fat Secondary School in Tai Kok Tsui. Photo: LKWFSL Lau Wong Fat Secondary School.

Oscar Fung, who studied at Lung Kung World Federation School Limited (LKWFSL) Lau Wong Fat Secondary School in Tai Kok Tsui from 2019 to 2025, filed a writ in the District Court on Thursday, local media reported.

According to the writ, Fung experienced gender dysphoria at the age of 14 when her parents separated.

During the Lunar New Year holiday in 2024, Fung decided to grow out her hair. However, she was reprimanded at school after the break because her hair exceeded the length permitted for male students and was accused of violating school rules.

The writ stated that Fung was scolded by two teachers for almost 30 minutes one day, with the teacher threatening to withdraw her from science competitions she was representing the school in.

Equal Opportunities Commission
Equal Opportunities Commission. Photo: Kelly Ho/HKFP.

Fung felt embarrassed and angry as other students witnessed the scene. She was then sent to the disciplinary teacher, who accused her of “cosplaying as a girl” and told her to cut her hair.

The writ also mentioned that Fung had filed a complaint with the Equal Opportunities Commission, but it was dismissed.

‘Injury to feelings’

Fung alleged in the writ that the school had breached the Sex Discrimination Ordinance, as female students were allowed to grow long hair while male students were not.

She asked the court to declare the school’s rules discriminatory and to order it to pay damages for “injury to feelings,” a term under the ordinance.

The District Court in Wan Chai, Hong Kong, on November 2, 2023. Photo: Hans Tse/HKFP.
District Court in Wan Chai. File photo: Hans Tse/HKFP.

The writ also stated that one of the school’s vice principals, Pang King-fai, had twice dismissed the Sex Discrimination Ordinance.

During a meeting with Fung before the 2023-24 school year ended, Pang said the school was not subject to the Sex Discrimination Ordinance.

The second instance was during a ceremony on the first day of school for the 2024-25 academic year in September 2024. Pang told pupils publicly that male students’ hairstyles did not fall under the ordinance, and any challenges would be handled through disciplinary measures.

According to the writ, another vice principal, Li Wing-yee, told Fung that if she did not abide by the school’s rules, she should change schools.

A hearing for the case has been scheduled for July 15, according to the Judiciary’s website.

Hong Kong’s LGBTQ community ponders future of Pride events after Pink Dot’s second cancellation

7 June 2026 at 00:30
Pink Dot cancelled feature

On a sprawling promenade in West Kowloon, a gay choir lit up the stage with a chorus of harmonies. Children listened attentively at a storytelling session led by a drag queen dressed in pink from top to bottom.

Pink Dot at the West Kowloon Cultural District on December 10, 2023. Photo: Pink Dot HK, via Facebook.
Pink Dot at the West Kowloon Cultural District on December 10, 2023. Photo: Pink Dot HK, via Facebook.

Around them, dozens of tents representing LGBTQ-friendly NGOs promoted their services and ran mini games. 

These were scenes from Hong Kong’s largest LGBTQ event, Pink Dot, when it was last held in September 2024. The event attracted thousands of people, including families with young kids.

Since then, the annual outdoor carnival, which aims to celebrate diversity, has been axed for two consecutive years, including the one scheduled for this month.

The organisers announced the cancellation on May 18, around five weeks after they said Pink Dot would take place at Stanley Plaza and Murray House in mid-June, coinciding with Pride Month.

The event was also cancelled last year after the West Kowloon Cultural District Authority (WKCDA) declined to rent its Art Park venue to the organisers, although it had done so for five years.

Pink Dot started in Singapore in 2009, and five years later, Hong Kong held its inaugural event. For the first two years – in 2014 and 2015 – the carnival was held at Tamar Park in Admiralty.

In later years, Pink Dot took place at Art Park – except during the 2019 protests and the pandemic restrictions between 2020 and 2022, when the organisers cancelled or moved the event indoors.

Pink Dot Hong Kong co-director Brian Leung at Art Park, in West Kowloon Cultural District, on May 22, 2026. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.
Pink Dot Hong Kong co-director Brian Leung at Art Park, in West Kowloon Cultural District, on May 22, 2026. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.

To hold a public event like Pink Dot, organisers must apply for a Temporary Places of Public Entertainment Licence from the Food and Environmental Hygiene Department (FEHD).

Brian Leung, co-director of Hong Kong’s Pink Dot, told HKFP in late May that Link REIT, the venue operator, had informed the organisers that it could not rent the site in June because it had heard of “problems” with the event’s licence application to the FEHD.

Leung said it was unclear how Link REIT heard there were “problems” with the event’s licence application. He was never aware that there was ever any problem.

“So far, I have received no official explanation,” Leung said in Cantonese. “As an organiser, I cannot guess [what happened].”

People enjoy LGBTQ event Pink Dot HK at the West Kowloon Cultural District, on December 10, 2023. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.
Pink Dot at the West Kowloon Cultural District on December 10, 2023. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.

In response to HKFP’s enquiry, the FEHD said on May 21 that it received Pink Dot’s application in late April, but the event organisers told the department on May 18 that they had cancelled the event.

The applicant “said it would formally withdraw the application later, so the department does not have any follow-up,” the FEHD wrote in an email.

‘No political aims’

Pink Dot is not the only LGBTQ event that has encountered problems over the past year. The WKCDA axed a queer-themed play, We Are Gay, in October, nearly six weeks before it was set to open at the Xiqu Centre in the cultural district.

The following month, the Hong Kong Pride Committee – which used to hold the city’s Pride marches – called off an outdoor festival at Kwun Tong Promenade after the venue operator said the site was unavailable due to construction work. The last Pride march was held in 2018.

The cancellations have raised questions among LGBTQ activists about the future of holding events in Hong Kong.

“We do have concerns,” Leung said. “Does it mean that going forward, it will be very hard or impossible to find venues for events that are LGBTQ-related?”

In late July last year, Pink Dot’s organisers were forced to cancel – four weeks after the government released its proposed framework for a bill allowing same-sex partners to register their relationships. The bill was to comply with a Court of Final Appeal ruling in a lawsuit filed by LGBTQ activist Jimmy Sham.

Jimmy Sham
LGBTQ activist Jimmy Sham outside the Legislative Council on Sept. 10, 2025. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.

Sham, a former district councillor, told HKFP that when Pink Dot was cancelled last year, he thought it might be because the timing was sensitive, citing the government’s attempt to pass the framework.

The bill was eventually voted down in the “patriots only” Legislative Council in September, with many lawmakers citing a need to “uphold” traditional Chinese family values.

See also: ‘It is scary to be LGBTQ+ in Hong Kong’: Over 10,700 submissions received for same-sex partnership bill consultation

“But now that it’s been cancelled for a second year, people don’t have any idea why,” Sham said in Cantonese.

Leung said he brought Pink Dot from Singapore – where the event is still held every year – to Hong Kong in 2014, seeing it as a family-friendly celebration of diversity.

Pro-democracy lawmakers Raymond Chan and Kwok Ka-ki take part in Hong Kong's Pride Parade in 2017.
Pro-democracy lawmakers Raymond Chan and Kwok Ka-ki take part in Hong Kong’s Pride Parade in 2017. Photo: Kris Cheng/HKFP.

At the time, Hong Kong had annual Pride parades, with different themes each year, such as “Call for the law, equality for all” and “Stand up for diversity.” It was an opportunity for LGBT groups and their allies, including pro-democracy lawmakers, to rally on the city’s streets, waving rainbow flags and chanting slogans.

Since the Covid-19 pandemic, the organisers of the Pride march have only held indoor events.

“I thought it would be good to have an event like Pink Dot, which is different in nature. The Pride marches had clear political aims, while Pink Dot is softer, with no political aims,” Leung said.

Shrinking LGBTQ space in mainland China

Restrictions on the LGBTQ community in mainland China, where advocacy groups have been forced to disband and queer content has been censored, are not lost on Hong Kong activists and academics.

Jamie Zhao, an assistant professor and scholar on queer media at the City University of Hong Kong, said the shrinking space for LGBT activism could not be separated from mainland authorities’ lack of tolerance for publicly disruptive and “rights-demanding” activities.

The official attitude towards the LGBTQ community is closely aligned with the country’s renewed emphasis on family values, marriage and fertility, Zhao told HKFP. Amid an ageing population and low birth rates, the Chinese government has been encouraging citizens to marry and have children.

See also: ‘Boys’ Love’ dramas dance around China’s LGBTQ censors

“Queer life can be framed as non-reproductive, individualistic, foreign-influenced, or insufficiently aligned with the future of the nation,” Zhao said.

However, Zhao said mainland authorities’ approach to the LGBT community could not be described as a total crackdown. The growth in gay and lesbian bars, “boys’ love” and “girls’ love” drama series, LGBTQ reality dating shows and other elements that make up the “pink economy,” the academic said, shows that “commercially useful queer-coded culture” is still allowed to exist.

Posters featuring boys' love at a merchandise shop in Beijing on July 9, 2025.
Posters featuring boys’ love at a merchandise shop in Beijing on July 9, 2025. Photo: Adek Berry/AFP.

John Burns, an honorary professor at the University of Hong Kong’s Department of Politics and Public Administration, also said the official stance on LGBT matters in mainland China was a mixed picture.

Despite restrictions, Chinese production companies are still making new “boys’ love” dramas to meet popular demand, and they have not been shut down by authorities, Burns said.

In any case, the scholar said he did not believe the Hong Kong government was attempting to ban LGBTQ communities from gathering, or that there had been any related directive from the central government.

“I don’t think the central government is micromanaging Hong Kong on [LGBTQ] issues. I think they’re more likely to be micromanaging Hong Kong on national security issues,” Burns told HKFP.

‘Greater risk of disorder’ outdoors

Since the Beijing-imposed national security law was passed in 2020, large-scale outdoor events like marches and rallies have all but dried up. Besides political protests, the city no longer sees marches on topics like labour issues and women’s rights as it used to. 

“If the real issue is that the police are worried about national security, and people exploiting the outdoor event for something that it wasn’t designed for, then [the Hong Kong government] should say so,” Burns said.

Former lawmaker Regina Ip, who leads the government’s advisory body, the Executive Council, told HKFP that police tend to think outdoor events carry a “greater risk of disorder.”

She pointed to the Gay Games opening ceremony in 2023, which “was held at the Queen Elizabeth Stadium and went very well.”

Top government adviser Regina Ip delivers a speech at the opening ceremony of Gay Games 2023 on November 4, 2023. Photo: Graham Uden/Gay Games Hong Kong.
Top government adviser Regina Ip delivers a speech at the opening ceremony of Gay Games 2023 on November 4, 2023. Photo: Graham Uden/Gay Games Hong Kong.

Hong Kong co-hosted the international sporting event with Mexico in 2023, welcoming participants from around the world. However, the Gay Games in the city, which did not receive government sponsorship, saw far less participation than originally expected.

Like last year, Pink Dot organisers are looking into holding a private indoor event that will be livestreamed to the public, Leung said.

Asked whether Pink Dot would consider moving its event indoors in the future, Leung expressed concerns that they would still face problems getting an entertainment licence.

To Zhao, the visibility of the LGBT community has become “politically more vulnerable” in recent years because of its association with the non-establishment camp.

“Many openly queer or queer-associated public figures were connected directly or indirectly to pro-democracy politics, civil society, activism or critical public discourse,” she said.

Denise Ho
Cantopop singer Denise Ho. File photo: Jennifer Creery/HKFP.

Zhao referred to singer Denise Ho, who came out publicly during the Pride parade in 2012 and has spoken out about her pro-democracy stance.

Many politicians who took part in Pride parades belong to the pro-democracy camp, such as Leung Kwok-hung, also known as “Long Hair”; Raymond Chan, the first openly gay lawmaker; and Sham, one of the openly LGBTQ district councillors elected in 2019.

Leung, Kwok, Chan, and Sham were among the 47 democrats charged in a landmark national security case involving a primary election in 2020, and among the 45 who were jailed.

Zhao said: “This close association between queer culture and civil society has made queer visibility in Hong Kong more politically charged than in many mainland commercial contexts.”

‘Big loss’

Despite Pink Dot’s cancellation, some local activists are still hopeful that an LGBTQ space exists for the community to gather and celebrate diversity.

Jerome Yau, Chief Executive of AIDS Concern, on January 8, 2026. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.
Jerome Yau on January 8, 2026. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.

Jerome Yau, co-founder of Hong Kong Marriage Equality and chief executive of AIDS Concern, pointed to the fact that an outdoor event marking International Day Against Homophobia, Biphobia, and Transphobia (IDAHOBIT) went ahead over a weekend in mid-May.

On May 16 and 17, various organisations – from NGOs to an LGBTQ-friendly church and a queer advocacy media outlet – set up street booths in the heart of the Causeway Bay shopping district. The same event was held last year.

Yau acknowledged that organisers of large-scale events in Hong Kong faced “growing challenges” nowadays, but said he saw “no evidence” that Link REIT was under pressure.

IDAHOT LGBTQ
LGBTQ groups mark International Day Against Homophobia, Biphobia and Transphobia (IDAHOBIT) on May 17, 2025. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.

“Whatever those licensing issues may be, I hope there is more clarification,” he said.

Nick Lee, a lecturer at the Chinese University of Hong Kong’s Gender Studies Programme, however, said he felt it was possible that the venue operator did not experience direct pressure to refuse rental to Pink Dot organisers, but withdrew on its own accord out of an abundance of caution.

Still, Yau found it disappointing that Pink Dot could not be held for a second year in a row.

The event “had a good track record. It was a good sign that Hong Kong at the very least embraces diversity and inclusion,” he said.

“It’s obviously a big loss not just to the LGBTQ community, but to the whole of society.”

  • ✇Hong Kong Free Press HKFP
  • Hong Kong LGBTQ carnival Pink Dot scrapped for second year after venue pulls out Hillary Leung
    Hong Kong’s Pink Dot carnival has been cancelled for the second year in a row – again due to difficulties in finding a venue to host the event. People at LGBTQ event Pink Dot HK at the West Kowloon Cultural District, on December 10, 2023. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP. In a statement on Monday, the organiser said it had been applying for the necessary licences but had not received approval from the “relevant authorities.” Link REIT – the company that operates the venue where the event was plann
     

Hong Kong LGBTQ carnival Pink Dot scrapped for second year after venue pulls out

18 May 2026 at 09:53
Pink Dot cancelled

Hong Kong’s Pink Dot carnival has been cancelled for the second year in a row – again due to difficulties in finding a venue to host the event.

People at LGBTQ event Pink Dot HK at West Kowloon Cultural District, on December 10, 2023. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.
People at LGBTQ event Pink Dot HK at the West Kowloon Cultural District, on December 10, 2023. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.

In a statement on Monday, the organiser said it had been applying for the necessary licences but had not received approval from the “relevant authorities.”

Link REIT – the company that operates the venue where the event was planned – then told Pink Dot it could not rent out the space due to “licensing issues.”

“Faced with this uncertainty, given the tight timeline and the involvement of numerous partner organizations, after thorough considerations, we have had to make the difficult decision to cancel this year’s Pink Dot HK outdoor carnival scheduled for 14 June 2026,” the statement read.

Pink Dot previously announced in mid-April that this year’s event would take place on June 14 at Stanley Plaza and Murray House.

The event was also axed last year after organisers failed to secure its usual venue at the West Kowloon Cultural District. The organiser announced the cancellation in July, three months before the scheduled date.

The Pink Dot carnival on September 22, 2024. Photo: Pink Dot HK, via Facebook.
The Pink Dot carnival on September 22, 2024. Photo: Pink Dot HK, via Facebook.

The organiser said then that it had been in talks to rent Art Park, an outdoor space in the cultural district. But the West Kowloon Cultural District Authority later pulled out without giving any explanation.

In place of the carnival, Pink Dot held a livestreamed concert featuring performances and talks by activists, as well as a fashion show.

Last year’s statement on the cancellation, which had been posted on Pink Dot’s social media, has since been deleted.

Known as Hong Kong’s largest LGBTQ event, Pink Dot was first held in the city in 2014 at Tamar Park in Admiralty. The yearly carnival – which started in Singapore in 2009 – aims to promote diversity and raise awareness of the LGBTQ community.

Pink Dot is still held each year in Singapore, with the 18th edition scheduled for June 27.

Another event scrapped

Large-scale LGBTQ events have become a rarity in Hong Kong in recent years since Beijing imposed a national security law in 2020.

While LGBTQ groups have not been specifically targeted, activists say it has become harder to host big events.

The Rainbow Market, held by the Hong Kong Pride Committee, at The Wave in Kwun Tong on November 23, 2025. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.
The Rainbow Market, held by the Hong Kong Pride Committee, at The Wave in Kwun Tong on November 23, 2025. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.

In November last year, the Hong Kong Pride Committee scrapped an outdoor festival at Kwun Tong Promenade after being told the venue was not available.

Aquabeat, which operates the promenade event space, said the venue was unavailable due to government construction work. However, the Buildings Department later clarified that no such work was scheduled for that day.

The Hong Kong Pride Committee used to organise the city’s annual Pride parades. The last one was in 2018, and since then, it has switched to holding indoor bazaars.

See also: IDAHOBIT: Amid waning room for advocacy, Hong Kong LGBTQ groups cherish rare chance to raise awareness

Last year, the only outdoor, large-scale LGBTQ event that took place was in celebration of the International Day Against Homophobia, Biphobia, and Transphobia (IDAHOBIT) in May. As part of the event, LGBTQ groups ran street booths in a busy part of Causeway Bay, organising activities and holding talks by activists.

The event was also held this past Saturday and Sunday in Causeway Bay.

  • ✇Hong Kong Free Press HKFP
  • Host of Hong Kong LGBTQ radio show ‘We Are Family’ says Metro Radio halts relaunch Irene Chan
    Hong Kong’s Metro Radio has abruptly halted plans to relaunch radio programme We Are Family, an LGBTQ show axed by government-funded broadcaster RTHK three years ago, its host has said. The crew of the LGBT radio programme We Are Family. Photo: We Are Family, via Facebook. Brian Leung, the host of We Are Family, said on the show’s Facebook page on Wednesday that Metro Radio invited him in April to relaunch We Are Family on Metro Info Live, one of the radio’s channels. The invitation w
     

Host of Hong Kong LGBTQ radio show ‘We Are Family’ says Metro Radio halts relaunch

22 May 2026 at 11:27
We are family failed to relaunch

Hong Kong’s Metro Radio has abruptly halted plans to relaunch radio programme We Are Family, an LGBTQ show axed by government-funded broadcaster RTHK three years ago, its host has said.

The crew of the LGBT radio programme We Are Family. Photo: We Are Family, via Facebook.
The crew of the LGBT radio programme We Are Family. Photo: We Are Family, via Facebook.

Brian Leung, the host of We Are Family, said on the show’s Facebook page on Wednesday that Metro Radio invited him in April to relaunch We Are Family on Metro Info Live, one of the radio’s channels.

The invitation was made by Steven Ma, who was the CEO of Metro Radio at the time. It was decided that the show would start on May 29, Leung said.

After Ma announced he was leaving Metro Radio in May, Leung said he sought clarification from the head of Metro Info Live about whether the show would go on. He was told it would launch as scheduled and that an advertisement for it had already aired on Monday.

However, Leung said he received a call from the head of Metro Info Live on Wednesday afternoon, saying Metro Radio’s new management had decided to halt the relaunch.

No reasons were provided for the change, Leung said.

HKFP has reached out to Metro Radio, which is owned by CK Hutchison Holdings, for comment.

Veteran broadcaster Brian Leung
Veteran broadcaster Brian Leung, who hosted the programme We Are Family for 17 years. Photo: We Are Family, via Facebook.

“It was sudden and unusual… [I] send my apologies to all of We Are Family‘s supporters for getting everyone’s hopes up,” Leung said in the Chinese-language post.

“The platform is run by others, and we can’t influence their back-and-forth decisions. What we could do is to safeguard the channels we have left and continue to speak up,” Leung has said.

We Are Family was launched in 2006 to promote diversity and discuss topics related to gay culture and diverse lifestyles, according to the broadcaster’s website.

It was the city’s first and only LGBTQ radio show. After the RTHK suspension, Leung continued to run the show on the YouTube channel.

Hong Kong has seen a shrinking space for LGBTQ events in recent years.

On Monday, LGBTQ carnival Pink Dot announced its cancellation for the second year after its venue pulled out. Leung is also a co-director of Pink Dot.

In November last year, the Hong Kong Pride Committee scrapped an outdoor festival at Kwun Tong Promenade after being told the venue was not available.

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