
The applicant argued that policies requiring female prisoners to wear long trousers while male inmates may wear shorts amounted to unequal treatment, but Judge Russell Coleman concluded that the circumstances of male and female prisoners are not directly comparable in this context and that the existing provisions do not breach discrimination law.
The court’s ruling emphasises that differing custodial requirements reflect institutional considerations rather than prohibited unequal treatment.
The case, brought by a rights activist, revisited arguments about gender equality and institutional rules within the Correctional Services Department’s framework.
The plaintiff contended that the dress code imposed more restrictive clothing obligations on female inmates, effectively limiting their autonomy without sufficient legal justification.
Judge Coleman affirmed that the statutory and regulatory framework governing prisons grants authorities broad discretion to set standards that maintain order, security and operational needs, and that the conditions under review did not unequivocally amount to prohibited discrimination within the meaning of Hong Kong’s discrimination ordinances.
Legal representatives for the activist indicated that they would consider the judgment and potential next steps, while officials for the Correctional Services Department welcomed the decision as a reaffirmation of established custodial policy.
The case attracted public attention amid ongoing discourse in Hong Kong over the treatment of gender issues and equal rights in diverse administrative settings.
Observers noted that while this ruling maintains the status quo for prison policy, it does not preclude future legal challenges to other policies that may differentiate on gender-related grounds.
The court’s decision came more than a year after an earlier High Court decision allowed prison codes to be challenged on sex discrimination grounds, underscoring the judiciary’s role in balancing institutional autonomy against individual rights claims.





































