Category Archives: Chinese Head Tax issues + Gim Wong's Ride for Redress

Paul Martin interview on Toronto First Radio about Head Tax Redress


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Paul Martin Interview on Toronto First Radio about Head Tax Redress


– Just got this transcript of the Paul Martin interview on Toronto First Radio.  I
am simply amazed at how uninformed and poorly briefed that the Prime
Minister was on the issues.  Martin does not answer the questions
directly, and keeps repeating “the
the
head-tax issue is a terrible, terrible tragedy. It is an incident in
Canadian history that must not be forgotten.”  So I guess that this
makes it a “unique” event like the Japanese Canadian internment issues.


Paul Martin also says he met with head tax payer Charlie Quan and says Charlie told  him
What
I want you to use this money for is to educate Canadians. Not just
Canadians in the Chinese community, not me, I want you to educate
Canadians in the wider community what happened. This is the best thing
you can do with your money.”  I seriously doubt this.  Charlie was
interviewed by Sean Rossiter in Shared Vision Magazine and consistently
stated he wanted his money back.  Quan said “The other people don't
have to pay anything.  If immigrants from other countries pay, I don't
care.  I'll pay.  But only the Chinese pay and that's not fair to me.

http://www.shared-vision.com/2005/sv1801/headtax1801.html


Charlie Quan was also interviewed by Karen Cho in her documentary In the Shadow of Gold Mountain where Quan states that he wants his money back.
 

       
Simon Li, the 25-year-old host of a popular Chinese-language call-in
radio talk show on Toronto First Radio AM 1540, was given a chance to interview
Prime Minister Paul Martin about the upcoming election.

           
Li used a 10-minute time slot, arranged by a Martin campaign handler late
last week, to talk one-on-one with the Prime Minister about Chinese head-tax
redress – a major election issue for Chinese Canadians.

           
The issue has been roiling in Chinese-language media for weeks, gaining
more attention after a $2.5 million deal in principle was announced – just
before the election call – by Minister of State for Multiculturalism Raymond
Chan and the National Congress of Chinese Canadians, lead by Toronto lawyer Ping
Tan.

           
At issue is the form of an apology and appropriate redress for survivors
of the head tax that was  imposed on Chinese immigrants from
1885 to 1923, as well as community redress for the Chinese Immigration Act of
1923 which replaced the head tax by stopping all further immigration to Canada
and disenfranchising those Chinese who were already here. The federal act
separated families on both sides of the Pacific Ocean, and set the grounds for
further racial discrimination against the Chinese. It was not repealed until
1947.

           
Opponents have criticized the government for dealing with the NCCC, which
accepted the preconditions of “no apology, no compensation” in the proposed
settlement. 
They are also angered by the government selecting only one group to
represent all Chinese Canadians.

           
The Chinese Canadian National Council and partner groups, which
registered more than 4,000 head-tax survivors and descendants, have lobbied the
government since 1984 for recognition of past injustices and appropriate
redress. They were left out of the deal.

           
Li says callers on his talk show are saying the deal between the
Government and NCCC as similar to the sponsorship scandal in Quebec, involving a
potential payout to Liberal Party loyalists and the possibility that funds could
mushroom.

           
The following is a transcript of Li's taped interview with the Prime
Minister on Friday afternoon (Dec. 2, 2005) in the B.C. Room at the Fairmont
Royal York hotel in Toronto (Li will broadcast the entire interview for the
first time Monday night (Dec. 5) from 6:20 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. on his show, “Power
Politics,” along with translation of Martin's comments into Cantonese and his
own commentary and live call-in):

 
Prime Minister Paul Martin: Dear friends in the Chinese community. I'm
Paul Martin and you're listening to Simon Li's “Power Politics – Yet Boon Jing
King” – on AM 1540 Toronto First Radio.

 
Simon Li: Hello Mr. Prime Minister, welcome to “Yet Boon Jing King Power
Politics” on AM 1540.

 
Martin: Well, it's great to be here.
 
Li: Mr. Prime Minister, do you know that the head-tax issue is
galvanizing young voters and people outside the Chinese community
now?

 
Martin: I think that the head-tax issue is a terrible, terrible tragedy.
It is an incident in Canadian history that must not be forgotten. People
suffered. I've met victims of it, and it's incredible what those people went
through. These are people who made a tremendous contribution to
Canada.

           
That's why it's so important to acknowledge it, why it's so important to
commemorate and it's also why it's so important to educate young Canadians and
Canadians for generations to come about what happened, so that kind of thing can
never, never happen again.

 
Li: But are you aware that the Liberals' way of handling it is now
galvanizing young voters? I have to say that we've got the strong impression
through our call-in show that the government's proposed settlement is actually
mobilizing the reluctant Chinese population to vote. My callers would like to
ask you this question, Mr. Prime Minister: What is so wrong with saying sorry to
those who paid the head tax?

 
Martin: What is essentially … You're dealing with a government policy
that has been established for a long time.

           
It's important to acknowledge how terrible an event this was. And that's
what we have done. If you take a look, not only have we put up the original $2
million but there's more money to come and this was done by Raymond Chan who is
a minister in the Canadian Government.

           
It's important to acknowledge it. We've acknowledged it. It's important
to recognize just how tragic this was and we have done that.

           
But it's also very important to put in place educational materials so
that it never happens again and so that Canadians know what has
happened.

           
Now, in terms of what we have done, we met with the widest range of the
Chinese Canadian community and what they have said is, “Look, there are
differences of opinion; there are in any community on issues such as this,” and
we recognize that, but we had to deal with it, otherwise we were going to keep
on talking about it and talking about it. And I'm going to tell you something, I
want us to understand what a terrible thing this was.

 
Li: But what's so wrong in saying, “Sorry”?
 
Martin: We're acknowledging what happened. I mean this whole issue
occurred because it is such a terrible tragedy. Yes, we are dealing with
government policy that has been established a long time.

           
But what we have done as a Liberal government is gone further and say
we're going to deal with it. We're not going to allow this thing. You know, the
Conservatives could have dealt with it 10 years ago. They didn't deal with it.
Previous Liberal governments could have dealt with it. They didn't deal with
it.

           
We have dealt with it. And we met with the Chinese Canadian community
right across the country in order to come up with a formula that was acceptable
to them.

 
Li: Mr. Prime Minister, I've met a 100-year-old man who has paid the head
tax. He would like to ask you this question. What is wrong with you giving him
back his money?

 
Martin: You know, I also met with a person who was somewhere between 93
and 98, who paid the tax. I met with him in Vancouver.

           
What he said to me was, “What I want you to use this money for is to
educate Canadians. Not just Canadians in the Chinese community, not me, I want
you to educate Canadians in the wider community what happened. This is the best
thing you can do with your money.”

           
You know something? Look at this country. Look at our great strengths. If
we don't know the flaws in our history, how are we ever going to improve. And
that's what this man said to me. He really said, “I want you to take the money
and I want you, I want you to educate Canadians.” That's what we want to
do.

 
Li: So in a nutshell, the 100-year-old man that I talked to would not get
his money back?

 
Martin: What he is going to get is that Canadians for generations to come
are going to know what a terrible thing happened to him. And he's going to know
that in fact this country will never do it again, because they will understand
that that is just not the way that Canadians should act.

           
This man, the man that you're talking about, as with Mr. Charlie Quon
that I met in Vancouver, will know that in fact his suffering will not go in
vain.

 
Li: What do you have to say to my callers who have said that your party
has taken the (head) tax payers' money (and given it) to political
cronies?

 
Martin: I was the person who put in place the Commission of Inquiry that
called in Judge Gomery …

 
Li: I'm talking about the head-tax issue here and the National Congress
(of Chinese Canadians)

 
Martin: Well, the National Congress is in fact we met with the National
Congress and they're the ones who said that we should deal with this issue.
They're the ones who said this it the way to deal (with it). But we met with
other leaders in other cities and right across the country on this issue and
they all said this is the way you've got to deal with it. Deal with it in terms
of education. Make sure that Canadians … Let me ask you a question: Do you not
want Canadians to be educated about this? Do you not want Canadians to
understand what has happened and what a tragedy it was? I do.

 
Li: Let me put it a more direct way. Why Mr. Prime Minister on the eve of
a federal election was so much money given to a single organization that sent
out squads of volunteers to campaign for Liberal candidates in Toronto's
Chinatown in the last election? We don't understand that.

 
Martin: Uh, this money is being given to the wider Chinese community.
It's not being given to any single organization and we met with leaders right
across the country on this. This is money that we're going to make sure that
Canadians know what happened. We're going to make sure that people are educated
about this.

           
This was a terrible thing that happened and I'm not prepared as the prime
minister of the country to do what other people have done and that's simply
ignore it. I'm going to deal with it. I mean this should have been dealt with
ages ago. It should have never been allowed to linger on in this way and I have
dealt with it.

 
Li: A follow-up question on your response, Mr. Prime Minister.
           
We were just talking about the representation of the National Congress,
previously, and the government's list of supporting organizations for the
proposed settlement consists of over 200 organizations, some of which are not
even aware, that's the organizations, (that they) have been included such as
CCNC, which was deleted from the list after filing complaints to Raymond Chan,
Family Services of Greater Montreal, Amities Chinoises, the Chinese
neighbourhood association in Montreal, et cetera, et cetera.

           
Have (sic) your government done the due diligence in your announcement
and could you provide evidence to show all the listed organizations have indeed
supported the proposed settlement?

 
Martin: When we dealt with the Chinese community we dealt with as many
people as we possibly could. And, obviously, we dealt with the
leadership.

           
Now, did we rely on what they were saying to us? Of course, we did and
that's what we should do.

           
Raymond Chan, and you can speak to him. Raymond Chan has met with as many
people as he possibly can. I, myself, have talked to Chinese leaders right
across the country.

           
I can tell you that the vast majority of them said, “Look, deal with this
thing. Don't allow it to continue.”

           
The problem that we would have had, what you're recommending, or that
some people would recommend, not you, is that we continue to stall and delay and
delay. I'm not prepared to do that. I want Canadians to know what
happened.

           
I have huge affection, huge respect for the Chinese Canadian community
and I want them to know what happened. I don't want to hide this thing any
longer. I want it to be out in public.

 
Li: But how could this be possible. How could, as I said before, your
government and Raymond Chan send out the list, saying that your settlement has
the support of 200 organizations? Several of them, they said they were not
aware. Back to my original question, how could this happen?

 
Martin: The fact is that we did consult with as wide a part of the
community as we possibly could …

 
Li: They don't think so.
 
Martin: Well, I can tell you and you can speak to Raymond Chan, but you
can also speak to members of the Chinese community. We spoke to as wide a
membership as it was possible to be done.

           
And I guess what we could have done is to delay, like other governments
have done, and never deal with it, but I think we owe the Chinese community too
much. I think they've made too big a contribution for us to delay any
longer.

 
Li: My last question, Mr. Prime Minister. Some of my callers when we did
a call-in show, a number of them believe this is another Liberal sponsorship
scandal, but it's in the Chinese community, not in Quebec. Given the money
you've given to the National Congress, do you agree?

 
Martin: I've got to say to you that I believe when a government says that
we're going to deal with an issue that's important as this, the recognition,
acknowledgement of a huge tragedy that happened in Canadian history and the
government says it's not going to do what previous governments have done, which
is simply to discuss and discuss and discuss, when the government says we're not
going to delay on this, that we're going to deal with it, we want Canadians in
the widest possible way to know what happened, I think that what we're doing is
the right thing.

           
I'm going to tell you something. The Chinese head tax was a terrible
thing and I never want to see it happen again. And I'm not prepared to delay.
I'm not prepared to hide it. I'm going to deal with it, and that's what we have
done.

 
Li: Mr. Prime Minister, thank you very much for joining us.
 
Martin: Thank you.

Prime Minister Paul Martin interviewed on Head Tax issues on Toronto Radio

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Prime Minister Paul Martin interviewed on Head Tax issues on Toronto Radio

Please  check out this amazing
exclusive interview with Paul Martin on Toronto Radio about the head
tax issues. – You will be surprised!

Listen on-line today – 3:20pm to 4pm PST
 at http://www.torontofirstradio.com/default.html

Please the CCNC media advisory below.

Todd Wong
BC Coalition for Head Tax Payers and Descendants
604-240-7090

Chinese Canadian National Council

Media Advisory: December 6, 2005

Toronto First Radio’s Exclusive Interview with Prime Minister Paul Martin

TORONTO
FIRST RADIO AM 1540 “Power Politics” commentator Simon Li’s exclusive,
one-on-one interview with Prime Minister Paul Martin in the B.C. Room
of the Fairmont Royal York Hotel in Toronto
on Friday, Dec. 2, 2005 airs tonight. The full taped interview with
Chinese-language translation, and live commentary and call-ins, will
broadcast on AM 1540 tonight (Tuesday, Dec. 6, 2005) from 6:20 p.m. to
7 p.m. EST.

 

CCNC will respond to the Prime Minister’s comments
tomorrow.

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For more information, please contact:

Victor Wong, CCNC Executive Director at (416)
977-9871

 

Raymond Chan's Dec 2 press conference in Mandarin Chinese only????

Raymond Chan's Dec 2 press conference in Mandarin Chinese only????


I attended the Raymond Chan press conference yesterday. They were only letting in
“journalists” and asked me for a card.  I told the office
staff that I was writing a piece for www.thetyee.ca
and gave them the card that of editor David Beers and said David had
asked me to write a piece for him.  I told his office staff that I was
there to hear Raymond Chan say why he was dealing only with the NCCC.  Then
they let me in.

The whole thing was a bit surreal because everything was spoken in
Mandarin.  I know only a few words in Mandarin “Wor shr Janada-ren
(I am Canadian)”,  “Wor bu-dong (I don't understand)”, and “Dwei
bu-shei (Excuse me/I'm sorry)” – which I repeated for Chinese media
afterwards in the parking lot.

There were two media briefings available.  One in English and one
in Chinese.  But they don't say the same things.  The English
one is basically a media advisory, and the Chinese one lists Raymond
Chan's views in  point form

During the Q&A period, One writer for the Sing Tao got into a
verbal exchange with Chan – I am sure she was challenging him on some
of the points, because he got very defensive.

Basically Chan was saying that all the Chinese Canadian organizations
were on side with him, but a few minority groups were speaking
up.  He also accused these individuals of being supported or
influenced by the NDP and Chinese media commentator Gabriel Yiu.

Sid Tan (Co-op Radio, Saltwater City TV) did ask a question in
English.  Tan asked if each of the 280 “supporting organizations”
wrote statements of support.  Chan said no – he did not have that
information.  I know personally that many of the organizations
such as the Chinese Canadian veterans are apolitical and are only
asking for an apology.  Some of the organization names are
repeated such as the Chinese Freemasons, and the Dart Coon Club –
because they are translations.

It has also since been revealed in the Chinese media that Kitty Ma of
the CCC, signed the agreement with ACE without taking it to the CCC
Board, so some of these organizations are apparently upset that their
names were used without their permission.  Chan said that he had
the signatories of the Vancouver Chinese Cultural Centre, Toronto
Chinese Cultural Centre and Chinese Benevolent Association and some
others, which represented those 280 groups.

After the Q&A period – Raymond's campaign/communications
coordinator came up to me to say hello.  Surprise!  It was
Ian MacLeod – president of Clan MacLeod Societies of Canada.  Ian
is a regular at my Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinners for the past 3 years
and he is a very nice guy.  He even helped me find out how I can
register a “McWong” tartan.

MacLeod quickly introduced Raymond to me and told him I am the creator
of Gung Haggis Fat Choy.  Raymond immediately acknowledged that he
already knew me, and has previously attended a Gung Haggis Fat Choy
dinner.  Raymond shook my hand and said to me “I am sorry I cannot
give you what you ask for.”  He was very quick with that apology –
although all I had said to him so far was “Hello.”

Hmmm…. maybe he got my letter to him about the CBC Radio interview
with Gabriel Yiu and Raymond Chan – the one that I posted on my
website, www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com and sent to all the Lower Mainland
MP's + party leaders.

After MacLeod had hustled Raymond Chan out to their next meeting, Sid
and I talked with some of the Chinese media reporters.  Our
mandarin is pretty well non-existent and we wanted to know what they
had questioned Raymond Chan about.  Before I knew it, they had
their tape recorders out and were asking us questions.  Gee-
whiz… I didn't expect that!  It sure was nice that they were
able to speak in English, and tell me what Raymond had said during the
press conference as they asked me my views on the issues.

I did point out that it was strange that everything was done in
Mandarin and there was no Cantonese or English translation – because I
thought that English and French were Canada's two official languages,
and Cantonese was the language of the original Chinese pioneers who had
to pay the head tax from 1895 to 1923.

I shared that when my great-great-grandfather Rev. Chan Yu Tan came to
Canada in 1896, the Chinese Methodist Church helpe to teach the
immigrant Chinese how to speak English.  Rev. Chan Yu Tan
encouraged the family to learn Canadian ways, and we have been doing
that for 7 generations.

I told them I didn't understand why Raymond Chan was giving money to
many immigrant societies, because it was the head tax payers and their
descendants who paid with their blood and sweat for many years in order
to help repeal the Chinese Exclusion Act, and to pave the way for new
immigrants to come to Canada.  It is like robbing Peter to pay
Paul.

more later… I have to write my Tyee opinion piece now…

Compensate Chinese immigrants fairly: Vancouver Sun's Daphne Bramham

Compensate Chinese immigrants fairly: Vancouver Sun's Daphne Bramham

Friday » December 2 » 2005

 

Compensate Chinese immigrants fairly


Botched attempt at redress has exposed a misunderstanding about the Chinese-Canadian community

 
Daphne Bramham
Vancouver Sun

Friday, December 02, 2005

There is no other group that Canada tried as hard to keep out as the Chinese.

For 62 years, a parade of governments formulated and enforced laws to
make it difficult and then virtually impossible for Chinese people to
immigrate.

And for more than 20 years, Chinese-Canadians have actively sought
redress for the policies that date back to 1885, when Canada imposed a
head tax on Chinese immigrants.

That was enforced until July 1, 1923 — Dominion Day — when it was
replaced by the Chinese Immigration Act, which should more properly
have been called the exclusion act.

The exclusion of Chinese was only repealed in 1947 under pressure from
Britain, which needed ethnic Chinese soldiers for the war in Asia.
Between 1923 and 1947, only 50 people were allowed to immigrate from
China.

The policies were also cruel. Families ended up being torn apart, in
many cases irrevocably. Not all of the men whose families had sent them
ahead to what was called Golden Mountain could ever earn enough to pay
the head tax required to bring their wives and families.

The tax started at $50, was increased in 1900 to $100 and then to $500 in 1903.

The legacy has been documented by writer Denise Chong in The
Concubine's Children: Portrait of a Family Divided and in a documentary
by Vancouver filmmaker Colleen Leung.

Over the years, while the Canadian government was actively recruiting
Europeans, including my ancestors, with the promise of free Prairie
land, it collected $23 million from 82,000 Chinese. Unlike my
ancestors, the Chinese immigrants were denied the full rights of
citizenship until 1947.

Earlier this year, Paul Martin's Liberal government set aside $25
million to redress not only the wrongs done to ethnic Chinese, but for
Italians, Ukrainians and Germans interned during the Second World War.
Of that, $12.5 million was earmarked for Chinese-Canadians.

That's a tiny fraction of what the government collected in head taxes.
Using the Bank of Canada's inflation adjuster, that $23 million
collected in 1923 is equal to $2.7 billion in current dollars.

But no one was asking for anywhere near that amount.

Since 1984, the Chinese Canadian National Council has lobbied for
redress. It has registered 4,000 head-tax payers and their families and
has consistently asked for two things — an apology and individual
compensation.

It based its request on a similar agreement reached in 1988 between
Canada and Japanese-Canadians to redress their internment during the
Second World War.

The two things the council wanted were the two things the Liberals said they would not negotiate.

So, Multiculturalism Minister Raymond Chan bypassed the council and
began negotiating with the National Congress of Chinese Canadians. The
congress was founded in 1991 by Chan, recently elected Vancouver school
trustee Don Lee and others, to play down Chinese human rights' abuses
including the Tiananmen Square student massacre in 1989 and improve
business relations.

Since then, the congress has provided political support to Liberal candidates, including Chan at his recent nomination meeting.

Congress president Ping Tan — a Malaysian-born Chinese who came to
Canada as a student in 1968 — quickly agreed to a $12.5-million
settlement, even though some of the congress board members criticized
the deal because it contains no apology and no individual compensation.

Last weekend — just days before the Liberal government was forced to
call an election — Prime Minister Paul Martin had planned to to sign
the deal at a Vancouver conference the congress was holding to talk
about what it would do with the money. The conference was paid for with
a $100,000 grant from Chan's department.

Martin didn't sign the deal because of growing pressure from groups
like the CCNC, the National Association of Japanese-Canadians, the
National Anti-Racism Council, the Urban Alliance on Race Issues and
prominent Canadians including Margaret Atwood, June Callwood, Shirley
Douglas, Stephen Lewis, Joy Kogawa, Naomi Klein and Toronto Mayor David
Miller.

Instead, after brushing past protesters, including a few people in
their 90s who had paid the head tax, Martin signed a $2.5-million
agreement with the congress.

“There is much anger and frustration at the federal government,” says
Sid Tan, the grandson of a head-tax payer, a director of the Chinese
Canadian National Council and head of the B.C. Coalition of Head Tax
Payers, Spouses and Descendants.

“His [Chan's] proposed agreement with the NCCC is unethical and
humiliates the very people who overcame the racist legislation to allow
him to serve in public office.”

The tragedy in this botched attempt at reconciliation is that Canada
has had more than the lifetime of most people to apologize and give
back the money to those to paid the tax.

Vancouver resident Charlie Quon is one of them. He's 98. Another
Vancouverite, Chung Shee Quon, is 100 and still waiting to get a refund
of the money her husband was forced to pay.

They deserve the money. They and their families deserve an apology.

For now, the January election has put on hold the deal that would have
handed millions to a group that has no connection to the head-tax
payers and their families.

The Liberals' botched attempt at reconciliation has exposed a deep
misunderstanding about the Chinese-Canadian community and about how to
redress human rights' abuses. It could cost them votes, and it should.

But after the election, the government must finally right the terrible wrong done to Chinese immigrants and their families.

It must negotiate with the people directly affected. And it must be willing to apologize and compensate them fairly.

To do anything else only adds further shame to a shameful history.

dbramham@png.canwest.com

© The Vancouver Sun 2005

CHINESE CANADIAN GROUPS REJECT LIBERAL'S STANCE ON HEAD TAX REDRESS

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CHINESE
CANADIAN GROUPS REJECT LIBERAL'S STANCE ON HEAD TAX REDRESS
 

TORONTO/VANCOUVER,   Dec. 2, 2005:
Chinese
Canadian groups are forcing Minister of State for Multiculturalism Raymond Chan
to explain his decision to award $2.5 million to one group that has divided the
community.

 “He knows that he
made the wrong decision. He knows that he has alienated half of his
constituency and now he’s trying to win them over with more
speeches,” says Susan Eng, co-chair of the Ontario Coalition of Chinese
Head Tax Payers and Families.

It
was the same thing when he kept saying to us that he wouldn't talk to
us if we refused to accept his conditions,” Eng said from
Toronto.  “Saying the same over and over again does not change the
reality of the situation,” Eng said.  “Justice has not been served
and Minister Chan cut out everyone else to favour his political
friends.”

Opposition
has been growing to the Liberals secretly negotiating the $2.5 million
deal with political cronies in the National Congress of Chinese
Canadians – to the exclusion of legitimate representatives of head tax
payers.  The deal was announced within hours of last Thursday's
no-confidence motion in Parliament.

This
is the most important election issue for Chinese Canadians across the
country,” says Todd Wong, spokesperson for the B.C. Coalition of Head
Tax Payers and Descendants, in Vancouver.  “It is galvanizing the
Chinese Canadian vote, particularly young voters, ahead of the
election.”

 “It is shameful that the Liberals
are trying to relegate this important issue concerning social and civil justice
for Chinese Canadians to the level of political payouts to their
friends,” he added.

The
B.C. and Ontario coalitions, with support from the Chinese Canadian
National Council, have been working together for the rights and redress
of the Chinese Canadian community over 62 years of legislated
racism.  A head tax was put on Chinese immigrants, from 1885 to
1923, during the building of our country, and then was followed by the
federal government imposing the Chinese Exclusion Act, which lasted for
24 years, separating families and loved ones, and setting the basis for
further racial discrimination.


30 –

MEDIA CONTACTS:

Susan Eng, co-chair, Ontario Coalition of Chinese Head Tax Payers and Families

416-960-0312

Todd Wong, spokesperson, B.C. Coalition of Head Tax Payers and Descendants,

604-240-7090

CCNC: Chinese Canadians Press Head Tax Redress Issue

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Chinese
Canadian National Council

For
Immediate Release: December 2, 2005

 
Chinese
Canadians Press Head Tax Redress Issue

TORONTO. The Chinese
Canadian National Council (CCNC) today called on all Party leaders to make
known their position regarding Head Tax redress during the election campaign.
CCNC and groups including the BC Coalition of Head Tax Payers, Spouses and
Descendants and the Ontario Coalition of Chinese Head Tax payers and Families
have organized a number of public events to protest the Government’s
failure to resolve this issue. Instead, Multiculturalism Minister Raymond Chan
chose to sign the Head Tax agreement (Chinese Canadians' Contribution to
Building Canada) on November 24, 2005. “We oppose this deal because it
offers no justice to the people who actually paid the Head Tax and suffered
under the Chinese Exclusion Act,” Colleen Hua, CCNC National President said
today. “The Liberal Government chose to ignore the 4000 redress claimants
who have registered with CCNC over the past 20 years. The 1 million strong
Chinese Canadian community, our allies and supporters will take note of the
various Party positions when voting on January 23rd.”

“I’m
amazed that Minister Chan would bungle this file so badly,” Sid Tan,
Co-ordinator of BC Coalition of Head Tax Payers, Spouses and Descendants.
“Some of the groups listed in the Government’s November 24th
news release are unaware that they are even on the list. Can the Prime Minister
please inform us how many groups have actually sent in a letter of support to
the Government?”

“The
Government has failed in its due diligence and this is how we end up with
Adscam,” Victor Wong, CCNC Executive Director said today.
“Canadians know better: we should never be seen to be profiting from
racism. The new Government should enter into a genuine process of
reconciliation to redress the Head Tax and Exclusion Act, especially now that
so few Head Tax payers and surviving spouses are alive.”

CCNC is a national
organization with 27 chapters across Canada. CCNC is joined in the
campaign for redress of the Head Tax and Chinese Exclusion Act by the Ontario
Coalition of Chinese Head Tax Payers and Families, BC Coalition of Head Tax
Payers Spouses and Descendants, Chinese Canadian Redress Alliance, the
Association of Chinese Canadians for Equality and Solidarity Society, and Metro
Toronto Chinese and South East Asian Legal Clinic.

-30-

For more information, please contact:

Victor Wong, CCNC Executive Director at
(416) 977-9871

Sid Tan, (604) 433-6169; (604) 783-1853

Chinese Head Tax: Protest in Vancouver Chinatown


Chinese Head Tax: Protest in Vancouver Chinatown


We chanted loud and proud.  We walked up Pender St and down Keefer
St.  We were interviewed by radio, TV and newspaper
journalists.  We waved at the Primeminister. We were ordinary
Canadians who just happened to be Chinese.  We were descendants of
head tax payers and we were supporters of a cause.  We were senior
citizens, we were Baby Boomers, and we were Generation X.  We were
all asking for an apology and for redress.

Somehow on Saturday, I ended up being a protest organizer.  I have
never done this before.  Yes, I have organized  Chinese
Robbie Burns dinners for 600, and organized dragon boat races for
thousands.  I have been an advocate for mental health, cancer
programs, Terry Fox Runs, dragon boat and Chinese Canadian issues – but
never before have I picked up a megaphone and urged the crowd to chant
“Apologize Now” – nor direct a crowd in a peaceful demonstration when
the Prime Minister was arriving at an event.

I woke up Saturday morning, and went down to Home Depot to buy some
correplast to make placards.  I arrived at the Chinese Cultural
Centre courtyard at 10:45am and Sid Tan, shouted out “The power of
two!” to onlooking media types.  I immediately asked Sid for the
markers he promised and started making signs, as Sid would shout out
“The power of Three”, and “Now we are Four!”  Our crowd would grow
steadily to 50, then 60, and more. People would bring banners and signs
saying “BC Coalition of Head Tax Payers and Descendants”, “Head Tax
Redress is only Fair”, and “NCCC Doesn't Speak for Me.”

My signs were little history lessons which said:

In
2004, the United Nations asked Canada to apologize and make reparations
for individual head tax payers and descendants.  Canada has
NOT?  Why ?

Chinese Head Tax

1885 – $50

1903 – $500

1923 to 1947- Exclusion

2005 – Apology FREE!

Forgiveness and Love is Forever!

A – Actual

C – Canadians

E – are NOT excluded

Redress for Head Tax Payers

and Descendants Now!

It was great to see so many people out on Saturday.  Lots of
cameraderie despite not being able to speak English or Cantonese to
everybody… but it didn't matter… there were lots of smiles. 
We tried our best to translate English and Cantonese for each
other.  We shared our stories and we helped each other out.

Vancouver Sun
took pictures.  Epoch Times, Sing Tao and World Journal all showed
up at the Chinese Cultural Centre courtyard.  There were security
guards at the CCC Multipurpose Hall who did not let our Coalition in
the doors.  the NCCC had invited many Chinese community
organizations and their members from across Canada – but they did not
invite our group or the Chinese Canadian National Congress which had
registered over 4000 individual head tax payers and descendants. 
So we protested and we asked Minister of Multiculturalism Raymond Chan
to come speak with us and answer our questions.

Lots of onlookers came by and asked us questions.  We explained the
facts.  They said they sympathized with us.  We saw some of the
conference goers peering out at us from behind the doors.


We spontaneously decided to take it to the streets and marched up
Pender St, across Main St, then down Keefer St. and back to the CCC
Courtyard.  All the while a Global TV cameraman filmed us and
interviewed Sid Tan – event organizer. 

We decided to take a little break and get some buns and water for
everybody.  This is when the police arrived and started asking us
what we were doing.  Very calmly and politely we told them, as we
continued updating our signs in anticipation of the Prime Minister's
arrival.  We changed some of the signs to read “Liberals Sold us
out!”  “PM Martin breaks his promises.” 

In front of the SUCCESS front, I was interviewed by
Toronto Star and CKNW 98 Radio.  Sid was interviewed by many
more…
CBC television was there… The PM's security tried to move us back
from the front entrance and off to the side -but we pretty well held
our ground. More and more people showed up.  People I never expected to see in
a protest.  People from many aspects of the community.  Very
respectable people.  And we shared our signs, smiled and chanted
some more.

We moved to better line up along the street and make sure the PM saw our newly renovated signs when his limosine pulled up.

When Prime Minister Paul Martin did show up, there was a lion dance with drums banging
loudly.  PM Martin was quickly hustled into the SUCCESS building
where he shook hands with boy scouts then went into the meeting to
speak to the NCCC and the organizations they had gathered to highlight
their ACE program for redress – which neither apologizes nor gives
individual reparation.

Outside we chant some more, sign up more names on the petition,
exchange phone numbers.  I grab the megaphone and thank everybody
for coming.  I announce that “We were interviewed by the Vancouver
Sun, Toronto Star, Global TV, Ming Pao, Sing Tao, Fairchild and many
more.  We have demonstrated that we are a community.  We have
asked for apology and redress.  And we have been heard! 
Congratulations everybody!”

It was an exhilerating day…
I hope some pictures of the event come our way soon….

See Alex Mah's short video film of the event:

Calling for a Just and Honourable Redress



picture:  PM Paul Martin arrives amidst protestors in Vancouver ChinatownVancouver, British Columbia



Film Synopsis

On November 26, 2005, government compliant groups met at the Chinese
Cultural Centre in Vancouver to put forward a “no apology, no compensation”
agreement-in-principle between the National Congress of Chinese Canadians
and the Liberal federal government represented by Multiculturalism Minister
Raymond Chan.

Individuals and community groups, representing head-tax payers, their
spouses, descendants and supporters organized a leafletting and information
line at the conference and subsequent photo opportunity attended by Prime
Minister Paul Martin at the SUCCESS complex in Chinatown.

Head Tax Protest: Redress: and a good time was had by us…Saltwater City reporting


Head Tax Protest: Redress: and a good time was had by us…Saltwater City reporting

Sid Chow Tan is the organizer of the BC Coalition of BC Head Tax Payers
and Descendants.  He wrote this e-mail describing Saturday's
protest outside the NCCC conference
at the Chinese Cultural Centre. This was the conference where the NCCC
had flown their members from across Canada and put them up in hotels
with money from a $100,000 grant.  Basically photo ops with
Raymond Chan and Prime Minister Paul Martin. Hopefully they don't use
the head tax redress payments for their conferences and organizational
costs.

Sid writes below:

Yo all

Simply,
the soul-suckers could not face us. The Prime Minister did not glance
at us. The Multiculturalism Minister and National Congress people snuck
out other doors. Set-up started at 10:30am. We remained together at the
CCC square, picking up numbers. A half an hour into leafletting, we
were a hundred and more. I'm hoping photos will start coming in.

We
could not attend the NCCC meeting and so held our  own. Placards
appeared. After occupying the square for an hour, the group
spontaneously decided on walk through Chinatown with Global TV. We went
up Pender onto Main, down Keefer and back to the square.

This
was a visual feast and galvanizing moment. We took up a collection and
got buns and water, Some socializing and gabbing and a decision was
made to welcome the Prime Minister at 2:00pm at SUCCESS. The group
halved to the hardy.

Then somehow, we started picking up people, practised our chanting and
started to have fun. If nothing else, it was already a successful day. 

At SUCCESS, the media following the PM started showing up. We
stared to suck up coverage with chanting and our numbers. Then a big
loud lion dance.

The PM was inside in three eye blinks,
looking straight ahead. There was quite a crowd by now. We spent
another half hour petition signing, answerings the public's question
and doing alot of smiling and laughing.

The day exceeded my
expectations by ten-fold. We got the names and numbers of a lot of
supporters. Lot's of multi-tasking. I can't begin to thank all the
people.

Our
banner looked good and most were feeling fine. We tried to do group
building and definitely sucked up media. At our level of organisation,
much more can be and will be done. We can have much hope and
inspiration at what our seniors and their families accomplished today.
This is only the end of the beginning. The legislation lasted over
three generations. It may take that long for a just and honourable
redress.

The subject line says it all. More later.

Take care. anon Sid

Head Tax Redress: Gabriel Yiu and Raymond Chan speak on CBC Radio Early Edition


Head Tax Redress: Gabriel Yiu and Raymond Chan speak on CBC Radio Early Edition



Gabriel Yiu and Minister of State (Multiculturalism) Raymond Chan were
both interviewed on CBC Radio Early Edition this morning by host Rick Cluff.  They
spoke about the current head tax issues.  My comments are in
italics.

You can hear the interview on-line
http://www.cbc.ca/bc/story/bc_chan-head-tax20051128.html

Gabriel Yiu said the following:


– Chinese Canadian community response
so far is one-sided. On Sat, Fairchild Radio & Channel M's
open-line shows (3 hours), not a single caller supported Liberal's
handling of the matter. 

(The issue has actually been very hot in the Chinese media for the past
2 weeks – Mainstream media has been slow to explore in-depth issues or
to give more than a wire story except CBC Radio.)

– On Sunday,  Sing Tao (page A2),
one of its headlines said “Martin gives political promise, will
apologize to Chinese if elected”. 

(This headline is translated
from the Chinese – and was attributed to NCCC chair Ping Tan, who said
this to the NCCC conference.  The Liberal position is that an
acknowledgment is as close to an apology as Chinese Canadians will
get.  Martin is clearly politicizing the issue.  It has
already been debated in standing committees at parliament.  Only
the NDP and Bloc Quebecois debated against the language that the
Liberals and Conservatives are trying to ram through as Bill C-333 put
forward by Conservative MPs Inky Mark and Bev Oda.  NDP MP
Margaret Mitchell
first tried to resolve head tax issues in the 1980’s.)

– CCNC has been working on the Headtax
Redress for over 20 years and it represents over 4000 Headtax payers
and they've been shut out of the government settlement.

(Chinese Canadian National Council
formed after the 1979 W5 issue when it was recognized that a national
voice for Chinese Canadians was needed. CCNC was also the organization
that started registering headtax payers and descendants since
1984.  The NCCC has not claimed that they have registered any head
tax payers.)

Raymond Chan basically attacked Gabriel Yiu next stating:


– Gabriel Yiu is not only a commentator, he is a NDP
 candidate

(FACT: Gabriel Yiu has been a Chinese
media commentor for many years and has also contributed to mainstream
media such as the Vancouver Sun, CBC Radio, Ming Pao and many others. Yiu is NOT a candidate in the upcoming
federal election, but did run in the provincial election as an NDP
candidate – same colour as Ujal Dosanjh before he joined the federal
Liberals to become a Senior Cabinet minister compared to Chan’s junior
portfolio.)

– Gabriel Yiu is misleading the community
(How is presenting the views of the
community misleading?  Chan must be desperate to resort to
personal attacks rather than to feature the facts).



– Chan denied any community opposition and said the settlement is well represented by a great many Chinese organizations

I
was one of 75 people protesting on Saturday outside on the NCCC
conference at the Chinese Cultural Centre and at SUCCESS when Prime
Minister Paul Martin arrived.  We chanted, and we held up placards and
were interviewed and filmed by Vancouver Sun, CKNW 98, Global News, CBC
TV News, Ming Pao, Epoch Times, Sing Tao.

Guess Chan wasn’t listening when many of the organizations listed on
the Liberal press release complained that they did not give NCCC
permission to use their names, or wasn’t aware that NCCC national chair
Ping Tan severely critized NCCC director Tsai Fung Chan Lee for openly
criticizing NCCC's approach, and urged its executive chairman Ping Tan
and the federal government to reconsider their approach to the Head Tax
issue.

Raymond Chan is WRONG on many facts!
I
believe that Raymond Chan is seriously misleading the public. He listed
a number of organizations such as the Chinese Cultural Centres of
Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver, and SUCCESS – an immigrant services
organization.  The directors of these groups are primarily 
immigrants
who arrived in Canada since 1967, not actual head tax payer
descendants.  These groups are interested in the cash grab that is
available to them – not for rightful redress to head tax payers. 
Chan
lists a number of projects for these organizations such as “museum
projects, youth education, restore historical building to remember
railroad workers, Toronto Cultural Association wants to build momentuum
for their centre.”  All these projects should be eligible for
already existing programs in Canadian Heritage or Multiculturalism.

The $23 million originally
collected from original head tax payers
was further worked off by themselves and their descendants who
basically gave up years of their lives to pay for
initial loans to pay for the tax.  They lived separated from
families over generations. The
total impact from 1885 to 1947, then further until 1967 when
restrictive immigration laws were relaxed, may never be totally known.

Chan also said the Chinese Canadian veterans are almost all head tax payers.
WRONG!
most were born in Canada, and many were head tax descendants, and guess
what? They weren't even allowed to fight for their country until
England asked Canada for Chinese speaking soldiers, and even then
Chinese Canadians still couldn't vote in Canada.  The veterans have
always asked for only an apology – not for compensation.  Jan Wong of
the Globe & Mail reported on Saturday that the veterans were
pulling out because no apology is being given.

Chan says that
the government cannot look at ethnic redress issues in isolation – “We
have to worry about, we have to consider all the other claims by other
ethnic groups that have claims to the government…”
WRONG
the Chinese head tax is a unique situation, because only ethnic Chinese
were taxed from $50 to $500 from 1885 to 1923 when Chinese immigration
was banned until 1947, and then very limited until 1967.  No other
ethnic group was taxed for immigration nor excluded, at consideral cost
to community and families.

Chan says that a “responsible” government cannot give away individual compensation for a past wrong such as head tax.  WRONG!
In 1988 the Progressive Conservative federal government under Prime Minister Brian
Mulroney signed a Redress package with Japanese Canadians that included
$21,000 individual compensation.  The CCNC and the BC Coalition of Head
Tax Payers are simply asking for a Tax refund of what the government
acknowledges was wrong.  The United Nations in 2004 asked Canada to
apologize
and make individual reparations, which New Zealand did.

Chan says the Chinese Community has never come together like this
before: 
WRONG! 

In 1979, Chinese ad-hoc committees sprouted up across Canada to protest
CTV's W-5 program which aired a misleading story called “Campus
Giveaway.” It was the CCNC that grew out of this unified movement.


Unfortunately Gabriel Yiu did not get a chance to dispute Raymond
Chan's statements.  Chan repeatedly said that Gabriel Yiu was
“lying” and “misleading the public” when it was clearly  Raymond
Chan who is out of touch with the community and needs to take Chinese
Canadian history lessons.  I recommend Paul Yee's “Struggle and Hope:
The Story of Chinese Canadians.” It's a good easy read written for
young adults.


You can find my name listed on the bottom of page 85 just
above Raymond Chan's in the Chronology: The Chinese in Canada. 
Raymond is listed for being an MP appointed to Secretary of State for
Asia Pacific Affairs whereas I am listed for being awarded the Simon
Fraser University Terry Fox Gold Medal for my personal battle with
cancer and for efforts to create racial harmony.

Please ask CBC Radio to present more in depth stories on Head Tax
Issues where the interviews can clarify their positions and also
include the actual descendants of head tax payers – not just the more
recent immigrants of the “Chinese community”. 

The CBC Radio Early Edition Talk Back phone number is 604-662-6690.

Globe & Mail: Jan Wong writes about Chinese head tax and Grandpa Wong

Globe & Mail: Jan Wong writes on Chinese head tax
and Grandpa Wong

I first met Jan Wong in Beijing in October 1993.  I
found her at her Globe & Mail Beijing bureau chief office, and we
talked about Terry Fox, Canada, her American husband, Svend Robinson
getting kicked out of China – and me speaking at the Terry Fox Run at
the Canadian embassy in Beijing.  Jan is very cool.  She has
written the books Jan Wong in China and Red China Blues, describing her
time as the first Canadian foreign student in Communist China.

The following is her story in the Globe & Mail.

“Give
the money to us” – Who gets the $2.5 Million federal payout announced
this week for Chinese Canadians.  Jan Wong reports on a taxing
question.


Globe & Mail

What would Grandpa Wong think?

Last week, the National
Congress of Chinese Canadians thought it had a good news story. In the
wake of similar federal agreements with the Italian and Ukrainian
communities, the congress triumphantly announced it had beaten out two
other Toronto-based organizations to negotiate a $12.5-million payout
from Ottawa for the head tax once levied on Chinese immigrants when
they entered the country.

But then reporters began asking awkward questions. Why did the deal
exclude an apology? Why was there no compensation to those who paid the
head tax? And why, on the eve of a federal election, was so much money
going to a single organization that sent out squads of volunteers to
campaign for a Liberal candidate running in Toronto's Chinatown in the
last election?

Ping Tan, a Toronto lawyer who heads the NCCC, started getting
tetchy. He publicly scolded Linda Tse, a Fairchild Television
correspondent, when she asked several pointed questions at his press
conference. “You don't ask questions like that,” he snapped.

Toronto First Radio, a Chinese-language station with a popular
suppertime call-in show, never got invited to the press conference in
the first place.

No wonder. A few weeks earlier, the host of the show, Simon Li, had
posed this loaded question to listeners: Do you think this is a
sponsorship scandal in the Chinese-Canadian community? “A majority of
callers said the only difference is it is taking place in the Chinese
community, not Quebec,” says Mr. Li, 25.

One major difference is that no one is suggesting that any criminal
conduct has occurred. It's a harsh comment, meant to reflect concerns
about Liberals favouring their supporters, but it demonstrates how
divisive the issue of head-tax redress has become among Chinese
Canadians.

Further complicating matters, the government, which could fall as
early as Monday, this week downplayed any suggestion of a done deal
with the NCCC. A spokesman for Raymond Chan, multiculturalism minister,
said on Tuesday that his department was merely “reviewing” the
application from the organization.

But on Thursday, Mr. Chan did sign an agreement in principle with
Mr. Tan — for just $2.5-million. And a multiculturalism program under
his purview provided Mr. Tan's group with a $100,000 grant for airfare,
hotels and meals for a national conference this weekend in Vancouver to
discuss how to spend the money.

So far, Mr. Tan says, the group has no specific plans for the payout
money. But one thing is certain: It won't be used to compensate the
families of Chinese Canadians who paid the tax, in compliance with the
government's stipulation that no individual redress payments be made.

Officials with Mr. Chan's office, who say that the NCCC is the only
organization that actually applied for redress money, issued a press
release that included a list of dozens of community groups that support
the deal. But one organization listed — a Chinese-Canadian veterans
group called Army, Navy & Air Force Veterans in Canada —
disassociated itself from the congress, specifying it wants an apology
as part of the government's settlement.

Another group listed is, in fact, one of the toughest critics of the
deal — the Chinese Canadian National Council, which has lobbied since
1984 for direct head-tax redress. “We want something for the head-tax
payers and their families,” said Victor Wong, executive director, whose
group didn't apply for the federal money because it disagreed with the
government's conditions. He says the council plans to file an
injunction to stop the payment to the Congress, and stage protests
today in Chinatowns in Toronto, Montreal, Edmonton and Vancouver, where
Prime Minister Paul Martin is expected to meet with Mr. Tan and other
congress officials.

Mr. Tan hopes his organization will eventually see even more money.
“This is the initial funding,” he says. “We have an agreement to
negotiate for more.”

In this pre-election flurry of feel-good largesse, the federal
government bypassed the one group formed to represent the victims, the
Ontario Coalition of Chinese Head Tax Payers and Families. The group
has signed up 4,000 payers and their families since the 1980s. It
estimates that only a few hundred head-tax payers, at most, are still
alive.

Like the callers to Mr. Li's radio show, the head-tax coalition
alleges that another Liberal scandal is in the making. “They will
transfer $12.5-million of taxpayers' money to political cronies,” Susan
Eng, the coalition's co-chair, said at a press conference last week
before the lower amount became public.

Pressed at the time for specifics about cronyism, Ms. Eng came up
short. But at Mr. Chan's Liberal nomination meeting last Sunday in
Richmond, B.C., congress members and officials packed the hall,
including many who didn't live in the riding, according to several
witnesses.

So what would Grandpa Wong make of all this? He and other family
members of mine paid a total of $1,300 — about $23,600 in 2005
dollars, according to the Bank of Canada inflation calculator — to
enter Canada. Grandpa Wong and my grandmother each paid $500 in 1915.
My other grandmother, who arrived in 1902, paid a lower head tax, $100,
as did her stepson and daughter-in-law. Her husband, Grandpa Chong,
arrived in 1881, before Ottawa dreamed up the tax. One of about 9,000
coolies recruited to build the Canadian Pacific Railway, he paid a
different tax — after the last spike was driven in — to stay in
Canada and find a new job. But that's another story.

Canada discriminated against aboriginals, Japanese, Germans,
Italians and Ukrainians, to mention just a few. The government devised
regulations to keep out Africans, Indians, Jews and a host of other
non-Aryan types. But only the Chinese were singled out for a punitive
admission fee — and issued receipts. From 1885 to 1923, more than
82,000 Chinese immigrants to Canada paid an estimated $23-million to
the government. (In 1923, the head tax was replaced by the Chinese
Immigration Act, the Orwellian name for a law that barred virtually all
Chinese immigration until its repeal in 1947.)

My grandparents might have had a claim for redress, but they died
decades ago. Even if I wanted repayment of their $23,600, it would
probably work out to the price of three Starbucks lattes by the time I
finished divvying it up with my zillions of cousins, second cousins,
their children, and their children. The rest would go to lawyers and
accountants — oh, wait; we have a dozen of those in the family, too.
The point is, we're all here and flourishing; thank you, Canada. But I
can't and shouldn't speak for others.

Jack Chong, a retired postal sorter, has kept his father's $500 head-tax receipt, dated April 9, 1914, and numbered 87126.

“We want the government to say they were wrong, to apologize,” said
Mr. Chong, 73. “Why don't they give the money to us? Instead, they
throw the money to the Congress.”

For 91 years, Har Ying Lee's family has also kept her father's
head-tax certificate. Mrs. Lee, 69, said her father worked as a
laundryman, briefly returning home to marry and start a family.

The Chinese Immigration Act forced him to leave them behind when he
came back to Canada. Mrs. Lee said her father saw her once when she was
an infant, and not again until she was 22 and had arrived as a bride in
Canada. “My mother is still alive. She's 97,” said Mrs. Lee. “My father
told me it took him so long to come up with the head-tax money that he
hoped my mother would have a long life to get the money back. She wants
the head-tax money back. We need direct compensation from the
government.”

George Lau, a thin, energetic man, is a co-chair of the Ontario
coalition of head-tax payers. His father paid the head tax in 1924.
Now, at 74, Mr. Lau fears time is running out for redress. He points
out that Mr. Tan came to Canada from Malaysia as a student in 1968,
after the era of the head tax. “They were not impacted,” said Mr. Lau,
speaking of people like Mr. Tan. “They shouldn't be given sole
responsibility for handling this money.”