More on UK NatSec trial

The national security trial of Bill Yuen and Peter Wai in the UK gets underway

The two men, who hold dual British and Chinese nationality, are accused of agreeing to undertake information gathering, surveillance and acts of deception likely to materially assist a foreign intelligence service between December 2023 and May 2024. 

…Prosecutor Duncan Atkinson KC said the defendants received requests from people connected to the Hong Kong Police and Hong Kong authorities to gather intelligence about overseas Hongkongers for whom the territory’s government had issued bounties.

Messages between the defendants show one of the surveillance targets was prominent pro-democracy activist Nathan Law, the court heard.

…The Old Bailey case concerned the defendants and their associates “taking the law into their own hands and acting as if the UK law was of no relevance”, Atkinson added.

…Atkinson said Wai and Trickett were paid for their activity directly by the Hong Kong economic and trade office.

…He told the court that the gathering of such intelligence appeared to have coincided with measures by Hong Kong police to extend their reach beyond the jurisdiction of the territory.

From HKFP

“The defendants engaged in shadow policing operations on behalf of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, and thereby the People’s Republic of China,” prosecutor Duncan Atkinson told the jury.

They gathered information about “persons of interest” to Hong Kong and undertook surveillance, as if they were entitled to “when no such entitlement existed”, he added.

Some comments from the HK Democracy Council…

Wai also posted information about HK protestors in a WhatsApp group called Eagle Point Human Resources Company. He discussed w/ former HK cop Eddie Ma “infiltrating” a group called “Hongkongers in the UK.” Ma referred to HKers in the UK as “cockroaches.”

…In all, evidence was presented that Yuen & Wai were tasked w/ surveilling at least 4 HKers for whom the HK natsec police issued natsec arrest warrants & bounties: Nathan Law, Christopher Mung, Finn Lau & Tony Choi. [Also mentioned: Frankie Leung, Lee Wing-tat and YouTuber Tony Choi.]

…A big question: who were the 2 former HK cops working for? [Former HK cop] George Lee was for an unspecified period “seconded to the Security Bureau of HKSAR as Government Security Officer.” Was the HK Security Bureau behind this espionage operation?

The prosecution’s case sounds… quite spicy.


Nikkei Asia (paywalled) takes a stroll around the HK Museum of History. Sounds like a must-see attraction for tourists…

A tour of it now begins in what is known as the National Security Exhibition Gallery, where groups of schoolchildren on field trips are taken through its halls. The exhibit was created to commemorate, explain and — crucially — celebrate the NSL on the fifth anniversary of its imposition. Beijing’s goal in imposing the NSL was to ensure that the 2019 protest wave would be the last of its kind. The move was, therefore, in some senses a final conquest of Hong Kong, and the exhibit is evidence of the completion of this process.

…The exhibit dominates a museum that, before 2020, celebrated Hong Kong’s distinctive past and vibrant civil life. It even had the People’s Republic of China’s only museum allusion to the 1989 Tiananmen protests, through reference to local support for that struggle. In the current main exhibit, though, the focus is on a unified national history. The halls are full of artifacts — from national flags to objects from the past — presented as proving that Hong Kong was always meant to be and is now firmly integrated into China. The allusion to Tiananmen is gone, and the 2019 protests are denigrated, their suppression extolled as restoring order to a city that an allegedly foreign-backed “color revolution” had nearly destroyed.

The exhibit features film footage of street clashes, selectively showing crowd violence, never the police violence that was much more extensive. It goes into painstaking detail regarding the supposed necessity of the legislation and the new structures created to enforce it. There are instructions on plaques advising visitors to be vigilant and report suspicious activity to appropriate bodies — a bald self-advertisement of a surveillance state.

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Not one, but two UK NatSec cases

The UK trial of the HKETO staffer begins

Chung Biu “Bill” Yuen, 65, and Chi Leung “Peter” Wai, 38, are alleged to have carried out surveillance on Hong Kong pro-democracy campaigners claiming asylum in the UK.

They are charged with offences under the National Security Act.

Yuen is a former Hong Kong police officer who was working for the Hong Kong Economic and Trade Office in London, while Wai was working for the UK Border Force, was a volunteer Special Constable with the City of London Police and used to work for the Metropolitan Police.

…Opening the case for the prosecution, Duncan Atkinson KC said that Wai had misused Home Office and police computer systems to conduct searches for personal gain.

This included gathering information about people from Hong Kong claiming asylum in the UK and at one point he was being paid £2,000 a month, according to the prosecution.

…Among those the pair allegedly targeted was Monica Kwong, who has been accused of fraud by her employer Tina Zou. She says the accusation is false and she had been “set up”.

According to the prosecution, Yuen and Wai “undertook surveillance on her address, as if they were a legitimate UK police operation”.

Atkinson told the jury the men decided “to force their way into Monica Kwong’s home as if they were a legitimate police operation”, at which point the UK police, who were watching, intervened.

The jury heard that Yuen holds British and Hong Kong passports. He is employed by the Hong Kong Economic and Trade Office (HKETO) in London as an office manager and is the third most senior person there.

I don’t suppose the Hong Kong authorities will rush to comment.


It’s not unusual to read about NatSec cases for two days in a row – except that these are both from the UK. In the next one, British police arrest three men on suspicion of spying for China. Two are partners of current or former Members of Parliament…

In a Commons statement, Dan Jarvis, the security minister, confirmed that the arrests related to China and said he could give no further details so as not to risk the police investigation.

“I can also confirm this relates to foreign interference targeting UK democracy,” Jarvis said. “If there is proven evidence of attempts by China to interfere with UK sovereign affairs, we will impose severe consequences and hold all actors involved to account.”

…he hinted that those arrested were connected to MPs by saying that people should realise that foreign powers would not just target politicians but those close to them.

In a BBC report

Scottish Labour MP Joani Reid has said “I am not part of my husband’s business activities” after three men were was arrested on suspicion of spying for China.

Reid said she has “never seen anything” to make her suspect her spouse, David Taylor, has broken any law.

…”I am not part of my husband’s business activities and neither I nor my children are part of this investigation, and we should not be treated by media organisations as though we are.

“Above all I expect media organisations to respect my children’s privacy.”

Reid added that she had never been to China nor had she ever spoken on any China-related matters in the House of Commons.

“…As far as I am aware I have never met any Chinese businesses whilst I have been an MP, any Chinese diplomats or government employees, nor raised any concern with ministers or anyone else on behalf of, even coincidentally, Chinese interests.

“I am a social democrat who believes in freedom of expression, free trade unions and free elections. I am not any sort of admirer or apologist for the Chinese Communist party’s dictatorship.”

…The Met said the three arrests and subsequent search activity were supported by counter-terror police in Wales and in Scotland.

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HKETO staffer on trial in UK

This could be interesting…

…Bill Yuen, a manager of Hong Kong’s trade office in London, and Peter Wai, a former UK border officer … have been accused of gathering intelligence and conducting surveillance against Hong Kong democracy activists in the UK and of allegedly breaking into a residence in London.

Background from December 2024. A third defendant was found dead in a park.

US-based activist Anna Kwok, whose father was recently imprisoned for the NatSec offence of helping an absconder, is pushing for the passage of a law in the US barring Hong Kong Economic and Trade Offices from operating.

Would this count as collusion with a foreign power in Hong Kong? Surely it would…

The three men were charged with assisting a foreign intelligence service and engaging in foreign interference, in violation of the UK’s National Security Act…

Unlike in a Hong Kong NatSec case (eg Anna Kwok’s father), the pair have been out on bail, and will get a jury trial. They also get a normal, rather than specially designated, judge.

Curious/tenuous local angle: that judge, Bobbie Cheema-Grubb, attended what is now the Dickson Poon Law School at King’s College in London. She also has some experience of cases involving interference by foreign powers: a few months ago she gave a 10-year sentence to a British politician from a MAGA/populist grift party for taking bribes from Russia.

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Latest national-security threat: on-line retirees

HKFP reports

A Hong Kong court has sentenced a 68-year-old retiree to eight months in jail for sedition under the city’s homegrown security law, after the man published more than 100 Facebook posts criticising authorities and calling for a boycott of last year’s legislative polls.

Lam Chung-ming pleaded guilty on Friday to one count of “knowingly publishing publications that had a seditious intention” under the Safeguarding National Security Ordinance – known locally as Article 23 – according to local media reports.

…Prosecutors accused Lam of inciting hatred against police, the judiciary and government officials, as well as inciting a boycott of the “patriots only” legislative elections in his Facebook posts. According to the prosecution, some of his posts contained references such as “black cops” and “black judges” – with “black” alluding to corruption.

…Lam’s Facebook account had only about a dozen friends and each post received little reaction, his lawyer added, reflecting the limited impact of Lam’s posts.

Is this an amazingly good use of taxpayer’s money or what? I wonder how the authorities can even find someone whose social media account has only a dozen followers – who aren’t responding to his posts. (They might not even be alive. Who – other than bots – is using Facebook anymore anyway?)

If you are a 61-year-old urging people not to vote, you might get a suspended sentence

Bonney Ma, 61, was sentenced on Wednesday to two months in prison, suspended for 18 months, after she pleaded guilty to one count of inciting others not to vote in the run-up to the legislative race on December 7, according to the Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC).

…During the hearing last week, Magistrate Peter Yu said the case was serious because it concerned the elections, adding that any illegal acts relating to the polls would negatively affect Hong Kong.

While Ma may have shared the post after only a brief glance, the court must take into consideration that the public could be exposed to its message, Yu said.

Exposed to what sort of message? As many have pointed out in bewilderment before: it is legal to not vote, yet it is illegal to urge others not to – even though it is legal to urge them to vote. Is it part of judges’ job to detect absurd or illogically worded laws, or do they just assume that any legislation must by definition be totally coherent? 

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Academics (not in HK) look at the ‘yellow economy’

An academic paper titled The Economic Consequences of Protest Repression: The Case of Business Activism in Hong Kong. – essentially an analysis of the ‘yellow economic circle’. The link goes straight to the paper – no weird academic journal paywall stuff. From the abstract…

…the implications of repression on economic phenomena have received little attention. This study [examines] the impact of protest repression on business activism. Business activism refers to businesses taking a public stance on controversial social-political issues, a subject that has been understudied in academic research. We examine the effect of protest repression on business activism through the case of the “yellow economy circle” since the 2019 Anti-ELAB Movement in Hong Kong, in which some businesses publicly took a pro-movement stance by labeling themselves as “yellow businesses.” Utilizing a novel dataset containing geographical information about pro-movement “yellow restaurants,” we find that constituencies that experienced tear gas had a higher proportion of yellow restaurants. We provide two explanations for the causal effect, one from the financial-profit perspective and the other from the socio-psychological perspective…

Never noticed it before – but ‘buycott’ is a word…

…business owners had three options regarding their attitudes towards the movement, namely taking a pro-movement stance, taking a pro-government stance, or remaining neutral to the movement. If businesses joined the yellow economy, they could expect the pro-movement residents would buycott their businesses … but they risked losing pro-government consumers. Empirical research on political consumerism in Hong Kong suggests some additional financial benefits for being buycotted as a yellow restaurant: consumers supporting yellow shops were often willing to pay a higher price and be more tolerant of the quality of goods… In some cases, consumers furthermore deliberatively overpaid to support the movement… In contrast, if businesses publicly took a pro-government stance, pro-movement residents would boycott their businesses, but pro-government residents would support their businesses. Alternatively, a business could choose to be neutral to avoid either boycotting or buycotting. The optimal decision for a specific restaurant to reveal a political leaning or remain neutral depended on its customer base.

…owners of restaurants located in areas that were tear gassed were likely to experience anger and disruptions of their daily operations. Consequently, the use of tear gas could strengthen in-group identity and trigger emotional response among pro-movement business owners, which would make them more likely to take a public stance by joining the yellow economy.

The research confirms what many of us perceived at the time: the extreme levels of tear-gassing alienated significant numbers of moderate or neutral people – culminating in the resounding turnout and pan-dem victory in the November 2019 District Council election. They expressed their anger through consumer choices, and some previously neutral businesses joined the trend by embracing the ‘yellow’ cause as a marketing strategy.

The ‘yellow economic circle’ still exists, though websites that list pro-movement businesses are less used, and many of the restaurants and other outlets have discreetly removed more obvious signs of their stance. Several have gone out of business, either because of problems with officialdom or simply emigration. If you patronize only overtly yellow businesses, you will find yourself with a more limited range of options.

Instead, many people deliberately try to avoid businesses whose owners are known to be actively pro-government. One person I know still refuses to travel on the (government-run) MTR – which is rather extreme, not to say onerous. Is it realistic to insist that a large public company with responsibilities to shareholders, employees and customers (think HSBC) should have attracted certain retribution and ruin from the authorities by openly siding with ‘CIA-backed black-clad rioters’? Even in the US, where rule of law is supposed to still exist, big media, tech and other companies appease Donald Trump out of fear. What is less understandable, or excusable, is the massive pre-emptive cringe. Especially when the organization concerned is not even a profit-making company. Which brings us to…


An HKFP op-ed on Chinese University’s decision to expel undergraduate Miles Kwan after he was arrested for ‘seditious intention’ – launching a petition…

…this gradual change of focus [since Baptist U became more research-focused] pales into insignificance compared with the state of near-open warfare that local universities now wage against some of their students. No university now tolerates a student union. Many student publications have closed.

And now we have the case of Miles Kwan, a student at the Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK).

After the Wang Fuk Court fire, Mr Kwan organised an online petition calling for an investigation of the fire, accountability for those responsible, resettlement for the residents, and a review of construction supervision.

You would think this was harmless enough. All the things Mr Kwan had suggested were promised by Chief Executive John Lee a day or two later. Can it be an offence to agree with the CE too early?

…[Kwan’s arrest] does not look much like the majestic machinery of the law rolling on its impervious and impersonal way; it looks more like a deliberate act of intimidation by a regime which cannot tolerate any spontaneous expression of opinion not controlled by itself.

You might also think that all this had nothing to do with CUHK, where Mr Kwan was a student. What students get up to in their off-duty hours is generally nothing to do with their university authorities…

In any case, if a student is arrested, prudent universities stand back to await the result of the proper prosecution. The police case should go first. This sensible policy is, in fact, enshrined in the CUHK’s published procedures for handling student discipline cases.

How will the university respond to the petition calling on it to reinstate Kwan?

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First ‘abscondee’ family member imprisoned

Anna Kwok’s father imprisoned for cancelling an insurance policy he took out for her when she was an infant…

His daughter lives in the US and has been wanted by national security police for suspected foreign collusion since 2023.

Handing down the jail term, Acting Principal Magistrate Andy Cheng said the offence – under the city’s homegrown security law – was serious and that Kwok had showed no remorse.

He acknowledged that Kwok did not do anything that directly endangered national security, and that the funds – if successfully withdrawn – would only be used by the defendant.

So how was it serious? 

As Brian Kern points out, the prison sentence will cause anguish not only for 69-year-old Kwok Yin-sang himself, but to his daughter…

In fact, at least 51 relatives in Hong Kong are known to have been detained for interrogation in relation to the arrest warrants and bounties. They were brought into police stations and interrogated usually for several hours before being released. But taking the next step and imprisoning one of them represents a significant escalation.

…Now the regime was threatening to make their loved ones pay for their “transgressions.” And a form of hostage-taking commenced. But the problem was, if all it was doing was taking their family members in for questioning, overseas Hong Kongers would get used to that and not be terribly frightened. So it had to go a step farther. Thus, Anna’s father’s case.

…First of all it’s because family members are not doing anything that the regime can frame as crimes. And secondly, to show just how arbitrary the regime can be: it’s saying, we can get your relatives for anything at any time, so you had better be quiet or your loved one will pay. 

From CNN

“There is no such thing as … collective punishment, and it has absolutely nothing to do with whether the defendant and the fugitive are family,” [Magistrate] Cheng said.

Anna Kwok talks about the verdict on a YouTube vid.

Story also being covered by Reuters, BBC, NYT, etc, etc.


One of the aims of US-based exiled activists like Anna Kwok is the barring of Hong Kong’s Economics and Trade Offices. An op-ed in The Diplomat explains

…the HKETOs in Washington, D.C., New York, and San Francisco are engaging in activities that strengthen the Chinese government’s influence in the United States. They promote Beijing’s narratives and propaganda, counter-lobby against human rights legislation, and court federal, state, and local officials as well as business leaders and others. Don’t be fooled; the HKETOs are not neutral trade bureaucracies. They have a benign-sounding label that obscures their political function, allowing them to gain unique access and influence with U.S. corporations and in our states and cities.    


From Niao Collective, a collection of threads on Hong Kong protest art. And New Lines magazine on the emergence of Japanese anime in protest-related memes worldwide. 

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Buzzwords and hubs

Hong Kong ’returns to black’. But the operating surplus includes income raised by issuing bonds, which of course are loans that have to be repaid with interest. Net that out, and they’re HK$100 billion in the red. But they’re still chucking it around anyway.

On to the details… What two things does Hong Kong need most? If you answer a) a new light show and b) more tourists – well done! (Should tourism promotion really belong in an annual government budget? If it’s going to cost the taxpayer money – the HK Tourism Board is getting HK$1.6 billion – then I guess so.)

The 2026-27 budget speech is all here. Here are around half the subject headings, selectively edited to highlight the buzzwords, BS, hype and (a dozen) hubs…

Proactively (no less) aligning with the PRC’s Five-Year Plan This is there to remind everyone that we are a part of China, in case you hadn’t noticed….

Being an international financial centre, Hong Kong will drive “Finance+”, capitalising on our financial sector to better serve the real economy and industries with competitive edge, and pressing ahead towards mutual empowerment of finance and I&T.  In so doing, we can leverage our strengths to serve the country’s needs…

Not sure what that means. But rest assured that the purpose of Hong Kong’s international financial centre will continue to be to make money. For itself.

AI Obviously. 

Synergising with Market Forces to Accelerate Innovation and Technology Development Remember the Lok Ma Chau Loop? Now called the Hetao Hong Kong Park, plus San Tin Technopole – trendy-buzzword industrial parks. The ‘synergising’ is about urging landowners to rent space to trendy buzzword industries elsewhere in Northern Metropolis-Land. (My spell-check is OK with ‘synergising’, so it must be a word.)

Patient Capital is a thing – basically long-term investment in nice things that won’t make much money… 

In addition to seeking medium- to long-term investment returns for our fiscal reserves, the HKIC aims to bring in more frontier technology enterprises and patient capital to Hong Kong, as well as promote in‑depth collaboration among the Government, industry, academia, research institutes and investors.  It also aims to accelerate the establishment of Hong Kong’s I&T ecosystem and the development of strategic industry chains.  All these will enhance our competitiveness and contribute to the diversified development of our economy.

Are the civil servants who write this paid by the word?

Regional Intellectual Property Trading Centre  Desperately trying to think of something we can be a hub for, and something that isn’t tourism.

International Hub for High calibre Talents  Would ‘cluster’ be a better word? Or ‘magnet’ – at least ideally? On top of a classic East Asian collapse in the birth rate, Hong Kong has seen a significant outflow of young skilled people. Solution: replace them with Mainlanders. Problem: many of the Mainlanders plan to move on to other parts of the world.

Integrated Development of Culture, Sports and Tourism  But not necessarily in that order…

To support “tourism is everywhere” and promote “urban-rural integration”, we propose allocating $200 million for launching the “NM Urban-rural Integration Fund” as a pilot scheme. The scheme aims to encourage non-governmental organisations and relevant bodies to take forward rural tourism projects and bring economic vitality to rural villages.

The tourism bureaucrats who really hate beaches obviously hate those villages too. Have you tried ‘tourism is nowhere’? 

Green Finance, Green Tech, Green Blah Blah Whatever happened to Islamic banking? 

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ESF upholding HK traditional culture

Some friendly advice from Hong Kong’s anti-corruption agency…

The ICAC reminds parents that when making school admission applications for their children, they should never offer bribes to staff members in exchange for school placements…

Does entry to an ESF kindergarten really guarantee children a fast-track to Harvard and a career as a dazzlingly accomplished doctor or lawyer? Or are these parents planning to leave Hong Kong in the coming years (several have Pinyin names)? Or – are they just insecure and desperate social climbers?


A long open letter to Xi Jinping from Taiwanese tycoon Robert Tsao, founder of chipmaker United Microelectronics. As well as saying the PRC has no right to Taiwan, he shreds much of the CCP’s official version of Chinese history… 

Taiwan was occupied by the Qing Empire in 1683 and was ceded by the Qing to Japan in 1895, a period of 212 years. That can hardly be called “since ancient times.” Much of Ukraine was ruled by the Mongols from 1240 to 1362, more than 120 years. If one claimed that Ukraine has “since ancient times been the territory of today’s Mongolia,” that would obviously be a joke.

In 1928, Mao Zedong explicitly advocated that Taiwan should be independent and establish a “Taiwan Republic.” In 1936, Mao told American journalist Edgar Snow in Yan’an that if the Korean people wished to break free of Japanese imperialism, “we enthusiastically support their struggle for independence,” and that “the same applies to Taiwan.” In other words, in 1936 your Party did not even consider Taiwan to be Chinese territory, yet later it changed its tune and claimed “Taiwan has since ancient times been Chinese territory.” This shows the Party’s habit of rewriting history to suit political needs.

…A contract [the Joint Declaration on Hong Kong] formally signed by the Chinese and British governments in 1984 was declared non-binding as a mere “historical document” thirty years before its term expired. Yet the 1943 Cairo Declaration and the 1945 Potsdam Proclamation, more than eighty years ago, are absolutely “historical documents,” but your state insists they remain legally binding today. Is this not blatant double standards?

…your Party insists on unifying Taiwan because Taiwan has already realized popular sovereignty. Therefore you must silence the Taiwanese people, so that the Chinese people do not take Taiwan as an example and demand that your Party return power to the people, is that not so?

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Not exactly a surprise…

Twelve pro-democrats’ appeals are rejected in the HK47 case. HKFP story

In May 2024, the court found 45 of the defendants guilty over their roles in an unofficial primary election in July 2020. The primary aimed to maximise the pro-democracy camp’s chance at winning a legislative majority, enabling them to threaten a veto of the government budget to press for political demands like universal suffrage. Legal scholar Benny Tai received the heaviest jail sentence of 10 years.

…“The scheme was conceived, advocated and pursued by [Tai] as a ‘constitutional mass destruction weapon’ for the purpose of toppling the constitutional order in” Hong Kong, Judge Jeremy Poon said during Monday’s hearing.

“A LegCo [Legislative Council] member could not act in contravention of the overarching constitutional duty of upholding the constitutional order” in Hong Kong, the judge also said. “If a LegCo member joined the scheme… he must have necessarily acted in breach of such constitutional duty.”

Benny Tai’s plan to – potentially/ultimately – force the government to stand down by vetoing a budget always seemed fanciful and unnecessary; it would have been simpler just to declare that the aim of the pan-dem primaries was to win an election in order to increase popular political power. The National Security Law criminalizes attempts to overthrow or undermine the government, and the court’s 2024 guilty verdict rested on the notion that such a veto would be ‘indiscriminate’ (the Basic Law makes no mention of the purpose behind any budget veto) and would cause constitutional ‘mass destruction’ (actually, a new Chief Executive election). 

The bottom line is that Beijing cannot tolerate a system in which an elected legislature can meaningfully pressure the executive. The Basic Law provision on budget votes clearly allows for LegCo to force a government to stand down, regardless of any ‘crisis’ or other repercussions. So the NatSec Law overrides Hong Kong’s constitution.

AP report. Amnesty statement

None of these 12 defendants committed an internationally recognized crime; they have been serving lengthy sentences simply for exercising their rights to freedom of expression, association & participation in public affairs

The HK47 case also gave the authorities an opportunity to imprison most of Hong Kong’s most popular politicians. Which leads us to…


HKFP story on how residents of Wang Fuk Court tried to warn the government of hazardous renovation work before the deadly fire last November… 

In the string of emails seen by HKFP, the [Housing Dept] got back to Chris on October 31. “The safety of residents and workers has always been our group’s top priority,” the email read. “The inspection found that some of the external wall protective facilities still have deficiencies… Regarding the aforementioned issues, our group has instructed the contractor to complete the repairs as soon as possible.”

The response did not put Chris at ease, as the ICU did not mention whether it had inspected the quality of the scaffolding nets. “And if there were deficiencies, why did they not order the contractor to cease the operation until everything was fixed?” he told HKFP.

…“I think the government should bear the greatest responsibility. However, I dare not speak up,” Chris told HKFP in Cantonese, pointing out the sentencing of pro-democracy media tycoon Jimmy Lai and prominent democrats in landmark national security trials in recent years. 

He refused to use his real name, citing Hong Kong’s current political climate. 

Are you ‘inciting hatred of the government’ – thus liable for imprisonment under sedition laws – if you complain about official shortcomings? Some Wang Fuk residents clearly think so. Pre-2020, LegCo had democratically elected representatives who would have given the residents a voice, and possibly convinced officials to monitor the renovation work more effectively. Now, those lawmakers are barred from LegCo or are even in prison (see HK47 case), and their replacements are picked for loyalty to the government. Who can the public turn to? How can the rulers know what their subjects really feel (see bus seat belts mess)? It looks like a recipe for increasingly bad governance.

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Catching up

Just spent Spring Festival in a Pearl River Bay Area Hub-Zone two-floor apartment that cost a tenth (at most) what it would cost in Hong Kong. One weird feature: the bathroom has two toilets – one next to the shower, and the other inside it. Don’t ask. Will dig up photos, if I remember. Even by the standards of a city whose population of predominantly migrant workers has gone home for the holidays, Foshan is a soulless urban desert with architecturally bold but empty office blocks everywhere. If it weren’t for delivery drivers on mopeds, the roads would have been empty.

Some things from while I was away…

RazvenHK on Jimmy Lai

…Lai was neither the mastermind nor perpetrator … the idea that a single media outlet could have the influence to whip the people into a frenzy without there being very legitimate causes for concern is a laughable one. China thinks the people of Hong Kong are stupid while they are the only ones ignorant of the realities on the ground, desperately trying to rewrite history to try suit their political narrative. 


Joel Chan on Hong Kong’s demographics

Since mid-2017, the age 70-79 population in Hong Kong has increased by nearly 80%, while the age 20-29 population has decreased by 31%

Check out the graph. 


From LA Review of Books, A good summary and comparison of the 2010s protest movements in Taiwan and Hong Kong. 


Developed a weird curiosity with curling while being forced to watch the Winter Olympics, but I couldn’t avoid the mania over US skater Alysa Liu, whose father escaped China via Operation Yellowbird after the 1989 Tiananmen upheaval. Even more impressive than her swirling-around on the ice is (in my humble opinion) the way she carries off what should be an atrocious hair-dye job, which reminds me of the puppies painted to look like tigers I saw people selling in Shanghai in the mid-90s. Anyway: a substack piece on MAGA’s creepiness about her…

Before obsessing over Liu, reactionaries dominating Elon Musk’s X spent much of the Olympics attacking Team USA athletes who criticized Trump and his administration. That all changed after Liu skated her way into overnight celebrity status. Some posters tried to claim her as MAGA, while others were less subtle in turning her into fodder for depraved fantasies.

…Turning Point USA hypeman Jack Posobiec, who the female-centered dating app Bumble banned in 2018, has been posting about her for the last several days. Posobiec even meme’d Liu’s face into a story about Trump’s response to the Supreme Court’s tariff decision in what looks like an attempt to positively associate her with the president.


Probably shouldn’t be on YouTube, so watch it while you can if you are of a certain age/demographic: Urgh! A Music War – a (good quality audio/video) 1982 film of live performances by the Dead Kennedys, Gary Numan, Klaus Nomi, Steel Pulse, Devo, UB40, Echo & the Bunnymen, the Police and more. 

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