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Are there any ethnic minorities in Hong Kong?

There are ethnic minorities in Hong Kong, but the number is small.

The population of Hong Kong is mainly Chinese, accounting for nearly 95% of Hong Kong's population. Most of them are from the Pearl River Delta in Guangdong. Most of them speak Cantonese, and English and Mandarin are also very popular.

Some of them moved to Hong Kong with a temporary mentality. Even if a regional fraternity or chamber of commerce is established in Hong Kong, it is still marked by the word "visiting Hong Kong". More than 550,000 people in Hong Kong hold foreign passports.

Although the population of ethnic minorities in China is small, they are widely distributed. All provinces, autonomous regions and municipalities directly under the Central Government are inhabited by ethnic minorities, and most county-level units are inhabited by more than two ethnic minorities.

Ethnic minorities in China are mainly distributed in Inner Mongolia, Xinjiang, Ningxia, Guangxi, Tibet, Yunnan, Guizhou, Qinghai, Sichuan, Gansu, Heilongjiang, Liaoning, Jilin, Hunan, Hubei, Hainan, Taiwan Province and Chongqing. China is the country with the largest ethnic composition in the world, with 25 ethnic groups.

Besides Chinese, Indonesians and Filipinos are the most, followed by Europeans and Indians. Like people in Indonesia and Thailand, Filipinos who settled in Hong Kong are mostly domestic helpers, and some Filipino singers and musicians who settled in Hong Kong after World War II play in lounges or leisure places.

In addition, there are no fewer South Asians recruited and recruited by Britain from India, Pakistan and Nepal during the British occupation. They worked as police and soldiers (such as Juka soldiers), bank guards, construction workers or taught English in public schools and subsidized schools in Hong Kong.

Most of the British who settled in Hong Kong were senior managers and professionals of large enterprises and government departments who came to work and settle in Hong Kong during the British occupation, as well as English teachers in public and subsidized schools. Most Japanese who have settled in Hong Kong are middle and high-level Japanese-funded enterprises who have come to work and settle in Hong Kong.

Baidu encyclopedia-Hong Kong