British Columbia

B.C. shop owner 'surprised' he's in guide that colour codes businesses to support Hong Kong protests

A Vancouver business owner and a retired Hong Kong politician back a crowdsourced shopping guide that colour codes businesses according to ones they feel are in favour of Hong Kong anti-government protesters, but a UBC scholar is concerned the online guide could cause "a great deal of division."

Vancouver business owner backs solidarity project, but UBC scholar urges caution

The entrance of a tea shop in Hong Kong has been turned into a 'Lennon Wall' of pro-protest notes, in this Thursday photo. Stores that openly support Hong Kong's pro-democracy protest movement are nicknamed 'yellow shops.' (Mark Schiefelbein/The Associated Press)

Alan Yu runs an auto repair shop in northern Richmond, B.C. Last month, Yu discovered his business was caught up in a political debate that is raging across the Pacific.

A Facebook group published a crowdsourced list that categorizes his eight-year-old business as "yellow," meaning he supports the ongoing protests in Hong Kong.

Yu said he was "surprised" but happy that his business had been identified as one that supports the protesters, who since last spring have staged massive demonstrations calling for political change in Hong Kong. 

"If the people like it, I can put the Lennon Wall in my office," he said, referring to a space for Post-it notes written with solidarity messages for the protesters thousands of kilometres away.

Yellow vs. blue shops 

In Hong Kong, people who sympathize with pro-democracy movements call themselves "yellow ribbons." Those who support the Chinese government and the police's use of force on protesters call themselves "blue ribbons."

The idea to form a "yellow economic circle" originates from a protest slogan being circulated on a Hong Kong discussion forum: "Boycott the blue businesses, shop at the yellow businesses." 

The Canada Hongkonger page, liked by nearly 13,000 users, has been inviting Metro Vancouver "netizens" (politically conscious people using the internet) to report which local shop is yellow, blue or green (meaning political neutrality).

Alan Yu owns a Richmond, B.C., auto repair shop that a crowdsourced shopping guide has identified as being a yellow business. (Salimah Shivji/CBC)

Yu, 46, immigrated to Canada several months before the former British colony was reversed to China in 1997. He said the yellow solidarity campaign may have the same impact of pro-democrats' landslide victory in the district council elections: "Maybe the Chinese government will try to adjust something for the Hong Kong people."

'Yellow' means corporate responsibility

Albert Chan was a pro-democratic district councillor and legislative councillor in Hong Kong for three decades before moving back to Vancouver two years ago. He praised Yu for participating in the developing "yellow economic circle" for the Lower Mainland.

The 64-year-old said being a yellow business is a matter of corporate responsibility and social conscience: "If you can support a government killing people without reasons, that reflects your values. With people holding those values, how can you trust them to run a business?"

Former Hong Kong lawmaker Albert Chan supports the 'yellow economic circle' in Vancouver. (CBC)

The retired politician said Hong Kong is being economically controlled by Beijing and yellow shopping is to terminate this situation. He said Canadians should also buy yellow because of what he called the "alarming" Chinese infiltration into their way of life, citing B.C. seniors' homes failed care standards after takeover by a Chinese government-controlled company.

"If the Trudeau government refuses to do anything to control that, sooner or later Canada will become a colony of Communist China," Chan said of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

Canada Hongkonger administrator Rick Lau said his Facebook group has connected with Yellow Avengers, an initiative to compile a global yellow shopping guide for Hong Kong travellers.

'Yellow economy' may create division

Leo Shin, a history professor at the University of British Columbia, said the idea of using spending power to pressure on a government is not new, quoting the global Anti-Apartheid Movement where international companies disinvested from South Africa.

Shin looks at the shopping with caution, saying it could potentially cause "a great deal of division within the Chinese communities."

UBC historian Leo Shin said the 'yellow economy' may divide Chinese communities. (CBC)

"We should always keep in mind that the ultimate goal is not to encourage division, but to promote coming together in one form or another," the historian said.

But Yu suggested yellow and blue can coexist: "They believe what they believe, I believe what I believe. In Vancouver, you have freedom of speech... That's the foundation of Canada's democracy."

CBC News contacted B.C. businesses labelled as blue on the list. They all disputed the label and declined interview requests.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Winston Szeto

Digital journalist

Winston Szeto is a journalist with CBC News based in Kelowna, B.C. in the unceded territories of the Syilx. He writes stories about new immigrants and LGBTQ communities. He has contributed to CBC investigative journalism programs Marketplace and The Fifth Estate. Winston speaks Cantonese and Mandarin fluently and has a working knowledge of German and Japanese. He came to Canada in 2018 from Hong Kong, and is proud to be Canadian. Send him tips at winston.szeto@cbc.ca.

With files from Salimah Shivji