In Japan Times, an International Women’s Day op-ed from activist Frances Hui…
Denied bail, [Chow Hang-tung] continues to challenge Hong Kong’s authorities even from prison, most recently by bringing a judicial review against a dress code that forces female inmates to wear long trousers even in brutal summer heat, while men can wear shorts. In January 2026, a male judge dismissed her legal challenge as baseless and ordered Chow to pay all costs.
The symbolism is hard to miss: Hong Kong, under Beijing’s tightening grip, insists on regulating women’s bodies, even behind bars, in ways it does not impose on men.
…When women rise to visibility, the CCP sexualizes us to undermine our competence. In 2023, the Hong Kong government put a 1 million Hong Kong dollar ($128,000) bounty on my head, along with other overseas pro-democracy activists. The Beijing-controlled authorities accused us of “inciting secession” and “collusion with foreign forces” under Hong Kong’s draconian National Security Law, a crime that can carry a sentence of life in prison.
…But there is also a deep misogyny in this assault on my liberty. As a woman activist now living abroad and targeted by the Hong Kong government, I have lost count of the comments attacking my appearance, calling me derogatory names and reducing me to sexual insinuation. The implication is clear: A woman who rises to relevance must have slept her way there and is little more than a sexual object.
An interesting account, translated from a Mainland blog, entitled ‘My Spring Festival trip back home hit differently this year’. As the intro puts it, the author….
…describes a local economy where casual work has dried up, wages feel under pressure, and many low-skilled workers face increasingly precarious ways of getting by.
She also notes the impact of the surplus of men to women…
…Last year, I didn’t hear of any weddings in the village at all—except for one cousin of mine, who married a Vietnamese wife. The bride price was something like 200,000 to 300,000 RMB [$28,996-43,494]. She is now pregnant and due soon.
…there have been cases where the [Vietnamese] woman took the bride price and disappeared. Some stayed long enough to have a child, and then still ran off. Parents grind for years, saving every last bit, and in the end, it all goes down the drain on their son.
…Even so, plenty of people are so desperate to get married that they’ll take the risk and pay anyway. Standards have dropped too: fine, if she runs, she runs—just leave a baby first to carry on the family line, and then at least the bride price won’t have been “for nothing”.
Of course, most single men who don’t have money have largely stopped expecting they’ll ever marry. The older generation has also given up hoping. Anyway, when bachelors are everywhere, it doesn’t feel shameful anymore.
That was Hunan. My Spring Festival visit was to Foshan, which was largely devoid of women, men and children, apart from delivery drivers zipping around the empty streets on mopeds. The most puzzling thing was the bathroom in the fairly decent middle-class apartment block I stayed in: toilet on left and shower on right. So far, so normal…
But – inside the shower, another toilet…
Both have this label…












