‘Commando-style’ tourism hits Hong Kong…
…an extreme “budget travel” spectacle has emerged, with large groups of tourists setting up their own tents for street camping in Hong Kong’s urban areas, even encroaching on core districts of the political and business elite. Netizens have spotted that the covered pedestrian bridge outside the Government Headquarters in Admiralty has turned into a “free campsite,” with multiple tents from mainland outdoor brands pitched along the walkway, creating a scene reminiscent of a “refugee camp” right at the gates of the government headquarters.
…Beyond Admiralty, this “urban camping” trend has spread to residential neighborhoods; around Tseung Kwan O’s LOHAS Park Station, covered walkways have seen even more exaggerated campsite setups, with at least six to seven tents lined up in a row, monopolizing the passage and completely disregarding the original purpose of public facilities.
I thought it was just me, but it seems quite a few people stayed at home for much of the long weekend simply to avoid the Mainland tourist crowds. This must have suppressed local consumer spending, while the Mainland visitors often bring their own food.
The Committee for Freedom in Hong Kong reports that press freedom in the city has hit a new low. (If you’re in Hong Kong, don’t be surprised if the link doesn’t work. The medium is the message!) Some details and a timeline from HKFP.
DW awards Jimmy Lai its annual Freedom of Speech Award.
An angry government press statement ensues…
The Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR) Government today (May 1) strongly condemned the attempts by an anti-China organisation and foreign media to sugarcoat the criminal acts of national security offender Lai Chee-ying and to slander, smear, as well as attack the HKSAR by releasing a so-called press freedom index and presenting a so-called “award”. Such despicable behaviours totally disregarded the rule of law and twisted the facts, which must be strongly condemned.
…”Some media organisations and organisations that claim to represent journalists have conflated the criminal acts in the Lai Chee-Ying case with freedom of the press, and have even played up different cases to vilify the HKSAR, with the purpose of misleading the public and defaming the HKSAR’s human rights and rule of law. In fact, the Lai Chee-ying case has nothing to do with freedom of the press at all. Over the years, the defendants were using journalism as a guise to commit acts that brought harm to our country and Hong Kong.
Plus one from the all-patriots LegCo…
A spokesman for the Legislative Council (“LegCo”) today (May 1) strongly condemned the release of a so-called press freedom index by a foreign media organisation and presentation of a so-called award to the national security offender Lai Chee-ying to sugarcoat his criminal acts, and smear the press freedom and rule of law in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (“HKSAR”). LegCo strongly condemns and firmly opposes all untrue comments that defame the human rights and rule of law in the HKSAR.
(Notice different uses of quote marks: the government press release uses them for “award” but not the first use of “HKSAR” in parenthesis; with LegCo it’s the other way round.)