China Watchdog has Cathay Staff ‘Walking on Eggshells’ Amid Hong Kong Protests

China Watchdog has Cathay Staff ‘Walking on Eggshells’ Amid Hong Kong Protests
A Cathay Pacific Boeing 777-300ER plane lands at Hong Kong airport after it reopened following clashes between police and protesters, in Hong Kong, China, on Aug. 14, 2019. Thomas Peter/Reuters
Reuters
Updated:

HONG KONG—Staff at Cathay Pacific Airways, Hong Kong’s flagship airline, are on edge.

Their city has been gripped by months of pro-democracy protests, and their company is feeling the wrath of China’s aviation regulator after some staff members took part or expressed support.

Since an Aug. 9 directive by the Civil Aviation Authority of China (CAAC) that called for the suspension of staff who supported or participated in the demonstrations, the regulator has rejected some entire crew lists without explanation, two sources with knowledge of the matter told Reuters.

The rejections have forced Cathay to scramble, pulling pilots and flight attendants off standby while it investigates social media accounts in an effort to determine which crew member has been deemed a security threat, one of the sources said.

Other disruptions have come in the form of a huge jump in the number of plane inspections upon landing, four pilots said.

The flexing of regulatory muscle has contributed to a climate of fear within the airline, with employees telling Reuters they felt Cathay’s longer-term future as an independent company was highly uncertain and subject to Beijing’s whims.

The CAAC’s labeling of employees who support the protest as a security risk and its demand that they be suspended from flying over mainland airspace has been a de facto career killer.

Around three quarters of Cathay flights use mainland airspace and due to the directive, 30 rank-and-file staff, including eight pilots and 18 flight attendants, have been fired or resigned under pressure, according to the Hong Kong Cabin Crew Federation.

Cathay CEO Rupert Hogg and his top deputy also resigned in August amid the mounting regulatory scrutiny on the 73-year-old airline, one of the region’s most high-profile brands that draws on Hong Kong’s British heritage.

Former Cathay Pacific Group Chief Executive Officer Rupert Hogg attends a news conference on the carrier's annual results in Hong Kong, China on March 14, 2018. (Bobby Yip/Reuters)
Former Cathay Pacific Group Chief Executive Officer Rupert Hogg attends a news conference on the carrier's annual results in Hong Kong, China on March 14, 2018. Bobby Yip/Reuters

“Things changed very quickly,” said Jeremy Tam, a pro-democracy lawmaker and pilot who resigned from the airline after the CAAC directive, likening the atmosphere to a political trial. “The threat is huge and it’s almost like zero to 100 in two seconds.”

Reuters talked to 14 current and former employees for this article. Nearly all declined to be identified for fear of being fired or due to the sensitivity of the matter.

The CAAC did not respond Reuters requests for comment on the rejections of crew lists or the increase in plane checks. Cathay said in a statement it must comply with all regulatory requirements. “Quite simply, this is our license to operate; there is no ground for compromise,” it said.

The airline declined to comment on the number of employee departures, but said any terminations took into account factors such as a person’s ability to perform their role.

Demerit System

Aviation regulators around the world conduct occasional plane inspections at airports to ensure an airline is in compliance with safety regulations.

But after the CAAC’s Aug. 9 directive, the once-infrequent inspections occurred almost daily and included the new and unusual step of checking phones owned by crew for anti-China photos and messages, the pilots said, adding that this had led to flight delays.

The step-up in checks has increased the likelihood of regulators finding minor issues to write up, which pilots said had included dirt on the plane’s exterior and scratches on a fire extinguisher.

Infractions can have outsized consequences under the CAAC’s strict demerit points system, they said, noting the regulator could force Cathay to reduce its number of flights, cut destinations or in a worst-case scenario, revoke the airline’s right to fly to mainland China.

Management has urged staff to do their utmost to avoid infractions.

“It is nothing less than the survival of the airline at stake,” said a senior employee. “Management have made that abundantly clear at meetings.”

Cathay declined to provide information on its points under the CAAC system but said it wanted to emphasize that there had been no impact on its flight services into mainland China.

A Thousand Cuts

Employees are also feeling pressure from other regulatory bodies.

Last week, ahead of China’s National Day on Oct.1—the 70th anniversary of the Communist Party’s takeover of China—immigration officers at some mainland airports requested photos of crew with the Chinese flag, said a pilot at regional arm Cathay Dragon who flies to the mainland regularly.

He said to his knowledge, most pilots—many of whom are expats from Western countries—had refused but Hong Kong cabin crew were “too nervous to say no” given the scrutiny on their actions by the company and the Chinese regime.

“Everyone is walking on eggshells in China,” the pilot said.

Cathay did not respond to a request for comment, while China’s Ministry of Public Security, which oversees immigration, did not respond to a request for comment during a week of public holidays.

There has been no let-up in the widespread, sometimes violent, unrest that has beset Hong Kong. Triggered by a now-withdrawn extradition bill, it has morphed into an outpouring of opposition to the former British colony’s Beijing-backed government.

Protesters occupy the departure hall of the Hong Kong International Airport during a demonstration in Hong Kong on Aug. 12, 2019. (Anthony Kwan/Getty Images)
Protesters occupy the departure hall of the Hong Kong International Airport during a demonstration in Hong Kong on Aug. 12, 2019. Anthony Kwan/Getty Images

The crisis has also meant a sharp drop in travel demand to Hong Kong, putting more pressure on Cathay.

Cathay’s overall passenger numbers were down 11.3 percent in August. Flights at Cathay Dragon, which does most of Cathay’s mainland flying, were on average 60-65 percent full in September, down from the usual 80 percent, according to estimates from two pilots.

The pilots said while the sharp drop in demand was in some ways similar in scale to that weathered by Cathay during the SARS epidemic and the global financial crisis, there were key differences that felt more threatening to the company’s future.

Some state-controlled firms such as China CITIC Bank International and Huarong International have told employees to avoid flying with Cathay, and it has been attacked by Chinese state news organizations as well as by many mainland consumers on social media.

CAAC’s Aug. 9 statement which called staff who supported the protests a security risk has also put Cathay’s reputation as one of the world’s safest airlines under a cloud it does not deserve, employees said.

Many acknowledged the new management team, which oversees around 33,000 employees, has few palatable options in dealing with the situation given the sway Beijing holds over the airline’s operations.

But they lamented the loss of freedom of speech and sense of job security, saying employees are afraid to speak about anything even vaguely political or voice support for protests on social media for fear of being reported by colleagues under a whistleblower policy.

“It has become a Hong Kong company with mainland employment terms,” a pilot at Cathay Dragon said. “The risk is death by a thousand cuts.”

By Jamie Freed