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Friday, March 29, 2024 | Back issues
Courthouse News Service Courthouse News Service

Hong Kong Airline Made Passenger Take Pregnancy Test

A Hong Kong airline forced a Japanese woman to take a pregnancy test before allowing her on a flight to a Pacific island popular with mothers seeking U.S. citizenship for their babies.

HONG KONG (AFP) — A Hong Kong airline forced a Japanese woman to take a pregnancy test before allowing her on a flight to a Pacific island popular with mothers seeking U.S. citizenship for their babies.

Midori Nishida, 25, was escorted to a public toilet at Hong Kong airport and told to urinate on a strip in November before being granted permission to board her Hong Kong Express flight to the U.S. territory of Saipan.

She had declared in a questionnaire at check-in that she was not pregnant but airline staff nevertheless requested she undergo a "fit-to-fly" assessment designed for women with a body size or shape resembling a pregnant woman.

The test came up negative.

"It was very humiliating and frustrating," Nishida told The Wall Street Journal.

She grew up on Saipan and her family has lived on the island for more than 20 years.

The airline apologized to Nishida and said the practice had been discontinued when contacted by Agence France-Presse.

"We have immediately suspended the practice while we review it. We'd like to apologize for the distress caused," the airline said in a statement.

Hong Kong Express said it had taken "action on flights to Saipan from February 2019 to help ensure U.S. immigration laws were not being undermined," in response to concerns raised by the island's authorities.

"We recognize the significant concerns this practice has caused," it said.

Saipan is a popular destination for women wanting to give birth on U.S. soil to secure American citizenship for their child.

In 2018 nearly 600 babies were born to tourists in the Northern Mariana Islands, which sit just north of Guam, also a U.S. territory — a figure greater than the number of babies born to locals.

According to data from local health authorities, 575 Chinese visitors gave birth there that year.

The influx followed the introduction in 2009 of a visa-waiver program to attract Chinese holidaymakers, a scheme that made the islands the only U.S. territory where Chinese citizens enjoy visa-free entry.

But in recent years Saipan has stepped up measures to curb birth tourism by requiring airlines to carry out screenings.

© Agence France-Presse

Categories / Business, Civil Rights, International

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