Several Hong Kong lawmakers on Friday raised concerns that proposals to restrict public access to information about directors of companies could make it harder for trade unions, journalists and lawyers to do their jobs.
The proposals, which would allow companies to withhold information such as directors’ addresses and full ID card numbers, were being discussed for the first time by a committee of Hong Kong’s Legislative Council (LegCo).
Some business groups, corporate governance activists and journalist associations oppose the plans, which they say could make due diligence more difficult, potentially facilitating fraud.
The Hong Kong International Chamber of Commerce wrote to the Legco committee this week saying the eagerness to push through the measures was “in disregard of the adverse consequences to Hong Kong’s business environment and to maintaining Hong Kong as an attractive city for investment and trade”.
However, at the meeting, other lawmakers and Hong Kong’s Secretary for Financial Services Christopher Hui, who was appearing before the committee, said the changes were necessary to prevent a practice known as doxxing, which has surged since anti-government protests in 2019.
Last year, there were 1,036 cases of doxxing – publicly releasing private or identifying information about an individual or organisation – official figures showed.
Hui added the proposals were only a minor change to existing arrangements.
The government will introduce the legislation next month. It is almost certain to become law as all of Hong Kong’s opposition lawmakers, bar one, resigned last November.
Under the proposals, companies would be able mask the residential addresses of their directors and only provide directors’ partial ID numbers, though full details could be obtained with the consent of the individual or by certain individuals such as liquidators.
Directors’ full ID numbers and residential addresses are currently accessible to the general public on Hong Kong’s Companies Registry.
Michael Tien, a pro-establishment lawmaker, said the changes could mean directors with similar names to others could be wrongly identified, adding even newspapers supportive of the government had raised concerns.
In Hong Kong, individuals often use English first names alongside their Chinese surnames, and different systems for writing Chinese characters in the Latin alphabet mean the same Chinese name can be written differently.
Other lawmakers said employees should be able to access information about company directors in the case of labour disputes, and lawyers should have access to full details of individuals to ensure they have the right person when filing lawsuits.
Hui, the government minister, said the chance of misidentifying a director was exceptionally low.
-Reuters