It is clear that it is Beijing rather than Hong Kong that took the initiative to snap the decades-long policy of permitting nationals of the Republic of India to get admitted into Hong Kong without a visa and stay there for a fortnight. The explanation given is that a few citizens of this country have “overstayed” in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region of China after having entered this former colony of the UK, which reverted to China only in 1997. This is clearly an excuse. More than 99% of visitors from India come for business or tourism. Moreover, unlike nationals of some of the EU nations, visitors from India do not get involved in the nascent independence movement of the former colony, where the English language is still spoken far more often and by many more locals than is the case on the mainland, where English is still uncommon. While the language is absent in the countryside and in smaller towns, even in big cities such as Shanghai and Beijing, those able to converse in the world’s link language are low in number, unlike in Hong Kong. The absence of a visa requirement has resulted in hundreds of thousands of visitors coming to Hong Kong from across India, each spending money and creating jobs in the former colony. There is also a large community of businesspersons from India in Hong Kong, and these serve as a bridge to the mainland and its markets. The fact that our citizens have thus far enjoyed visa free access has meant that it has been easy to bring relatives and friends over for short stays, a factor which has made Hong Kong a more attractive place to run a business from than Singapore, which insists on a visa before being permitted to enter the city-state. Thus far, despite the immense economic benefits that Singapore enjoys because of its links with India, the Ministry of External Affairs has not been able to persuade the authorities to grant visa free access to Indians, the way some other countries do and which gain far less from the policies adopted by Delhi. Now Hong Kong has followed the path of Singapore, and in the process ensured a substantial fall in the number of tourists from India visiting Hong Kong.
Another sector likely to get impacted is civil aviation. A large number of airlines offer flights to China and the US via Hong Kong, and the absence of a visa has made this an attractive proposition for several