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Serving the double standard
By Kane Wu
Aug 25 2011 9:40
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Mainland visitors notice it regularly - they don't get the same treatment as do local people in Hong Kong restaurants. Some cross-border customers even find the food quality unsatisfactory.

"What a disgrace to Hong Kong tourism!" blasted the comment on a mainland Internet forum for tourists, www.nasuan.com. The comment drew a lot of attention in the Hong Kong media earlier this month. 

The author of the post reprimanded "Yuen Kei", a cha chaan teng (Hong Kong-style restaurant) in Tsim Sha Tsui, Kowloon, where she had dined after going shopping, for having two different sets of prices - lower prices for Hong Kong residents and higher prices for tourists. 

"We ordered the same food as the local people at the next table, but the boss charged us HK$20 more!" complained the irate customer. "When we questioned the boss, he denied doing anything wrong, but actually said he had added more ingredients in our bowls! This is completely outrageous!" 

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      The woman discovered that the restaurant had two different menus - one for local people, one for tourists. Everything listed on the tourist menu was more expensive than the corresponding item on the menu for local people. After much argument, the restaurant owner finally relented, with much reluctance, according to the female customer, allowing her to pay the "local" price. 

      "Don't fool us tourists! I hope all fellow mainland tourists will boycott this restaurant from now on!" the woman railed as she concluded her denunciation. 

      A Chinese-language newspaper in Hong Kong grabbed the story and sent a reporter to the restaurant on Granville Street to pose as an overseas Chinese tourist. He was handed the tourist menu - the one with the higher prices. The scam was immediately busted. 

      That wasn't the only unpleasant confrontation between Hong Kong restaurants and mainland tourists this month. Two men from the mainland got into a fight, an actual physical tussle with a member of the staff at Chiu Hing Fishball Noodle Restaurant, back on Aug 9. According to the accounts, the mainland customers at this Tsim Sha Tsui retreat frequented by the wealthy and famous found an insect in a food bowl. An argument with staff members ensued. The argument escalated into a fight, which eyewitnesses said raged fiercely until police came to break it up. 

      In 2009, the Consumer Council got 18 complaints from mainland tourists about service in local eateries. In 2010, there were 25. In the first six months of this year, there were 13 complaints, five more than during the same period last year. Not only has the service in local restaurants suddenly come into question, so has the quality of the food, based upon what can be ascertained from the complaints. 

      "You can expect the food to be expensive at the tourist spots, but restaurants should not deliberately rip people off or treat them poorly just because they are tourists," commented Liza, who is from the mainland who didn't wish to give her full name. "Tourists won't necessarily complain to the Consumer Council. Most of them, I think, don't know where to complain," she added. 

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