-
The CFA says the right of abode provision in the Basic Law is clear enough and a further interpretation is unnecessary.
BBC: China media: Residency controversy
-
The court also extended the right of abode to children born out of wedlock to a parent who is a permanent Hong Kong resident.
CNN: A TRAGEDY OR A FARCE?
-
Caz Yon was one of the councillors who resigned after it became clear that property rights and the right of abode were not going to be forthcoming.
ECONOMIST: Day five: The many greenings of Ascension
-
It made a previous ruling in 2001 allowing mainland citizens born in Hong Kong to enjoy the right of abode regardless of their parents' residency status in the city.
BBC: China media: Residency controversy
-
The issue of right of abode is a sensitive subject in Hong Kong, with campaigners arguing that not allowing foreign domestic workers to settle in Hong Kong amounts to discrimination.
BBC: Hong Kong court denies domestic workers residency
-
The rift arose from a Jan. 29 judgment by the CFA. It granted right of abode in Hong Kong to possibly hundreds of thousands of mainland children of local residents.
CNN: COOLING A COURT CRISIS
-
And since the crown allows no right of abode to anyone not working or dependent on a worker, nor the right to own private property, no jobs means no people.
ECONOMIST: Ascension Island
-
Locals noticed that it was at the time that talk of a right of abode was at its height that, for the first time, a fence went up about the American base.
ECONOMIST: Day five: The many greenings of Ascension
-
In 2005 this process came to a shuddering halt as the British government made clear that it did not intend, under any circumstances, to allow a right of abode on the island, and that all property was to remain Crown property.
ECONOMIST: Day five: The many greenings of Ascension
-
The government had wanted advice on whether the Basic Law, Hong Kong's mini-constitution, grants the right of abode to children born in Hong Kong to mainland mothers who are neither local residents nor married to Hong Kong men - often referred to as "two not's" because neither of their parents are from Hong Kong.
BBC: China media: Residency controversy
-
Then there is the right-of-abode question.
ECONOMIST: Hong Kong
-
Is a star as solid as he is really the right choice to play a ghostly drifter of no fixed abode?
NEWYORKER: Violent Screen