A restaurant group that abruptly shut down nine eateries last week owes workers around HK$5 million, a labour union says.

Speaking on an RTHK radio show on Tuesday, the head secretary of the Eating Establishment Employees General Union, Wong Pit-man, said the union was currently assisting over a hundred workers at branches of Mee Lemongrass, Kokonoi Shokudo and Ma La Niang Zi to recover overdue salaries and pension contributions.

ma la niang zi
A Ma La Niang Zi outlet in Tseung Kwan O. Photo: Openrice.

“We have not been able to contact the owners of the restaurants yet,” Wong said.

The nine eateries are part of restaurant group Asia Catering, whose website is no longer in operation. A cached version of the site from April showed that the group was founded in 2006 and operated brands including Tom Yum Tom Yum and Your Cup of Tea.

Mr. Leung, who was a kitchen worker at Ma La Niang Zi, said employees were told without warning last Wednesday at around 9 p.m. that they should not come to work the next day as the restaurant was shutting down.

“We didn’t see any signs,” he said, adding that the restaurant had not been ordering any less inventory than normal recently.

Labour Department
Labour Department. File photo: Candice Chau/HKFP.

HKFP has reached out to Asia Catering for comment.

Wong said that if the union was unable to reach the restaurants’ owners, the Labour Department would open a case and take them to court. The Labour Department’s Protection of Wages on Insolvency Fund would cover the unpaid wages, though it would be a “slow process” that can take over a year, Wong added.

‘All for nothing’

At a press conference by the union on Monday, employees said they were taken aback by the sudden closures and having difficulty finding new jobs at such short notice.

Mr. Cheung, who had worked at Mee Lemongrass for almost three years, said he was owed HK$100,000, according to Ming Pao newspaper.

mee lemongrass
A Mee Lemongrass outlet in Tseung Kwan O. Photo: Openrice.

“I’ve worked so hard for so long, but now it’s like it was all for nothing,” he said.

Some workers also discovered that the restaurants had not been making legally-required contributions to their Mandatory Pension Fund accounts.

The MPF Authority said on Monday that it had received four reports this month from Asia Catering employees about missing contributions, with three cases already taken to court for civil proceedings.

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Hillary Leung is a journalist at Hong Kong Free Press, where she reports on local politics and social issues, and assists with editing. Since joining in late 2021, she has covered the Covid-19 pandemic, political court cases including the 47 democrats national security trial, and challenges faced by minority communities.

Born and raised in Hong Kong, Hillary completed her undergraduate degree in journalism and sociology at the University of Hong Kong. She worked at TIME Magazine in 2019, where she wrote about Asia and overnight US news before turning her focus to the protests that began that summer. At Coconuts Hong Kong, she covered general news and wrote features, including about a Black Lives Matter march that drew controversy amid the local pro-democracy movement and two sisters who were born to a domestic worker and lived undocumented for 30 years in Hong Kong.