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Hong Kong's rent-a-hawker syndicate busted
Illegal street vendors and corrupt officials were in cahoots.

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By J.A. Getzlaff

Feb. 15, 2000 | What do you do when you're a hawker who's been busted for selling on the street without a license? In Hong Kong, the answer is easy. You hire a licensed hawker to stand trial for you.



Daily Planet is a collection of short news items -- one each weekday -- that evoke and illuminate the far corners of the world. To read previous items, visit the Daily Planet archive.

Send all tips to DailyPlanet
@salon.com.


The licensed vendor shows up in court, gives his or her own name and walks away with a small fine. The unlicensed hawker pays the fine, pays the stand-in and pays the people who make the whole scheme work -- government officials who are, ahem, not opposed to a little payola.

It was all proceeding swimmingly until Hong Kong's Independent Commission Against Corruption caught on to the ruse. According to an Associated Press report, an 84-year-old woman admitted under oath that she was a rent-a-hawker, receiving $8 (U.S.) each time she showed up in court in place of a vendor caught selling goods illegally. She did this at least 105 times.

Her admission sent feathers flying and 29 people to jail. The Chinese government has no sympathy for curbside scofflaws -- last year, it threw 50,824 unlicensed peddlers in the slammer.

It's going to be that much more difficult to buy that bootleg 'N Sync CD now.
salon.com | Feb. 15, 2000

 

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