Hong Kong will file complaint to WTO on US tariffs, official says
Chan was responding to a US decision to impose 10% tariffs on goods from the Asian financial hub as US President Donald Trump targets Chinese imports
![File Photo: A World Trade Organization (WTO) logo is pictured on their headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland, June 3, 2016. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse](https://947631.windlasstrade-hk.tech/sites/default/files/styles/big_2/public/images/2022/12/10/2022-12-09t185924z_3_lynxmpeib80po_rtroptp_4_britain-eu-wto.jpg)
Hong Kong will file a complaint on recent US tariffs imposed on the city to the World Trade Organization, claiming the US has completely ignored the city's status as a separate customs territory, chief secretary Eric Chan said on Tuesday (11 February).
"This is absolutely inconsistent with the WTO rules. Of course, they have totally disregarded Hong Kong is a separate customs territory," Chan, the China-ruled city's number two official, told reporters.
"We will file a complaint to the WTO regarding this unreasonable arrangement," he said without giving specifics.
Chan was responding to a US decision to impose 10% tariffs on goods from the Asian financial hub as US President Donald Trump targets Chinese imports.
The US Postal Service last week suspended all inbound mail and packages from China and Hong Kong, then reversed that decision soon afterwards.
The move to stop accepting parcels from China and Hong Kong had caused chaos and confusion among retailers and express shipping firms over how to deal with the US tariffs.
"All I can say is the policies are mercurial," said Chan.
Trump's move also included closing the "de minimis" duty exemption for packages valued at under $800, with the stated aim of stopping the flow of fentanyl and precursor chemicals into the United States.
Hong Kong has long been known as a free and open trading hub, but China's imposition on Hong Kong of a sweeping national security law in 2020 drew criticism from the US and led it to end the former British colony's special status under US law, escalating tensions between China and the US.
The US subsequently stipulated that goods made in Hong Kong for export to the US needed to be labelled as made in China, ending one of Hong Kong's longstanding competitive advantages as a trading hub.