Hong Kong hospitals will limit
maternity services to most pregnant women from mainland China from next year,
under new proposals from its incoming chief executive.
Mainland women will be prevented from giving birth in Hong Kong unless they
have a Hong Kong husband.
While the proposal would only apply to public hospitals, private hospitals
have also agreed to follow suit. Increasing "birth tourism" from the mainland has caused tensions.
Soaring numbers of mainland women have sought to give birth in Hong Kong to
ensure that their child receives Hong Kong citizenship.
Furthermore, children born to mainland parents will not be guaranteed residency unless one of their parents is a Hong Kong resident.
'No choice'
Ethnic Chinese babies born in Hong Kong currently automatically receive the
right to live and work there, as well as the right to carry a Hong Kong
passport, which makes international travel easier.Some mainlanders also choose to give birth in Hong Kong to skirt the one-child policy, which can result in heavy fines for violators.
Mr Leung, who was elected with the weakest mandate of any chief executive to date, has been trying to rally political support with populist policies, says the BBC's Hong Kong correspondent Juliana Liu.
The Hong Kong government has already imposed quotas on the number of mainland mothers allowed to give birth in local hospitals, but residents say the quotas do not go far enough.
Alan Lau, head of Hong Kong's Private Hospitals Association, told the BBC that its members felt they had no choice but to comply with Mr Leung's wishes.
He confirmed that the hospitals would stop taking bookings from mainland mothers from 2013.
Many private hospital chiefs had initially opposed the proposals, citing financial and ethical issues.
Hong Kong has seen a surge in anti-China sentiment in recent months, due to resentment over "birth tourism" and claims that tourists from mainland China get preferential treatment.
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