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Politics

Bid Farewell to the Last Urban Walled Village

  by Nicki Wong & Melissa Ko The remaining tenants of Nga Tsin Wai Tsuen packed their belongings and cleared their houses  in the largely abandonned and messy village. Most of the other residents had moved out already They were ready to hand over their homes to the Urban Renewal Authority (URA). Nga Tsin Wai Tsuen in Wong Tai Sin district has a history of more than 650 years. It is known as "the last walled village in the city". The URA calls it a chapter in Hong Kong's " lost history".   A conservation project began in 2007 to preserve three of the relics: Tin Hau Temple, the village gatehouse and an embedded stone tablet. The target is to complete the works in 2018-19. "I think the whole village should have been preserved," said Mr Wing, who lives near Nga Tsin Wai Tsuen. Although many residents and neighbours may share his view, conservation experts find little reason to keep the whole village. "Since the development of Morse Park, living conditions in Nga Tsin Wai Tsuen has changed," said Wu Chi-wai, Legislative Council member for Kowloon East, and District Council member for Wong Tai Sin. Nga Tsin Wai Tsuen, which means "overflowing prosperity" was fortified against pirates and cannons in the 18th century. Ten years ago, it was full of shops and street food stalls, or Dai Pai Dong. "Had we started preserving the village then, it would have been worthwhile," he continued, "but now, I don't see any point in keeping it. Only eight blocks are left and that's not enough to represent the culture of the village," Mr. Wu said. Most of the old houses in Nga Tsin Wai have been torn down and there are fewer and fewer villagers over the years. All that's left are rubble and …

Newspapers Exclusively for Local Residents

  • 2016-02-19
  • 2016-02-19

  by Sing Lee It is 9 p.m. on a weekday when a group of post-80s and post-90s gather in a narrow store room in a public estate building to discuss on ideas for their next issue of Tin Shui Wai Bimonthly Newspaper. After working for a whole day in urban areas, these young reporters spend up to two hours returning to their hometown to start their night shift – telling stories about the place they sleep in. "Tin Shui Wai is doomed as a ‘bedroom city', in which inhabitants only take naps between their two sections of long working hours," said Chung Yuen Yi, an experienced social worker and the chief executive of Tin Shui Wai Community Development Network. But the group of youthful residents are doing more than hibernation in the kingdom of Sleeping Beauty. Back in 2014, when the network receive subsidies from a permaculture foundation, they were thinking of a way to build and present stories of a sustainable city. They decided to start a local post written by the neighbourhood themselves as people did not even know what Tin Shui Wai has. The press has covered stories on market, entertainment, handcraft shops and farming in the area. Readers find the newspaper a useful guide to explore their close-yet-unfamiliar district, and some even collect every volume of the publication. Editors of the bimonthly, who are also local residents, said preparing the reports was a learning process for them too, making them sensitive to the community's issues. Leung Lai-yan, a cultural studies graduate and the organising officer of the post, said it was a success that has made them to try publishing investigative reports. The latest issue of Tin Shui Wai Bimonthly Newspaper includes an article on the use of planters, quoting the amount that the Yuen Long …

Health & Environment

The Michelin Kiss of Death?

  • 2016-02-19

  by Tiffany Lui Not all Michelin-awarded restaurants in Hong Kong this year are rejoicing in the hope that the accolade might bring business. Some face the pressure of rising rent which may lead to closure. This phenomenon was coined by the media as the "Michelin's Kiss of Death". The Michelin Guide has been an index for excellent restaurants and food stalls since the 1900s. The 2016 edition of the Hong Kong and Macau Michelin Guide awarded 58 local restaurants and recommended 23 roadside food stalls. Since then at least two of those food stalls have been told by their landlords that their rents would go up immediately. Among them, Chiu Wing-yip, the owner of Kai Kai Dessert. "After we got the stars, the landlord increased our rent in the new contract by 120 per cent. That means we need to sell 5000 more bowls of sweet soups to cover the cost and I don't think we can make it!" Mr Chiu said. He said that the rising rent is definitely linked to Michelin but he is still happy to get the compliment. "We are very grateful to see people enjoying our food and Michelin has put a halo around our products." Mr Fu, a customer, goes to Kai Kai Dessert every week. He was shocked when he learned that the rent shot up. "I guess an increase of 15 or 20 per cent would be acceptable. But isn't 120 per cent a bit too much? No shop can afford this!" He is also concerned about the diminishing choice of local small food stalls. "I really don't know what to eat when all the shops near my home are McDonald's, Café De Coral and Maxims. I miss the fish balls and Cha Chaan Teng we used to have in Hong …

No Standard Working Hours for Maids

  • 2016-01-29
  • 2016-01-29

  by Jon Chan At the crack of dawn, domestic helper Jennifer Hinalan gets up to vacuum the house when most people are still tucked in their beds. Ms Hinalan, who works up to 15 hours a day, wakes up at 6 a.m. and goes to bed at 9 p.m.. Such a schedule is common among foreign domestic helpers in Hong Kong. The proposed Standard Working Hours Scheme (SWHS) though, is unlikely to offer any relief. The scheme, set to be introduced next year, will regulate working hours and overtime pay. But domestic helpers will not be covered. According to the scheme, once a worker has completed the standard number of hours, he or she should stop working. It also introduces overtime pay that compensates employees at a premium rate. However, the Standard Working Hours Committee has yet to include domestic helpers in its discussion or surveys, according to the committee's website. "The Standard Working Hours Committee is further exploring the directions of a working hours policy applicable to Hong Kong," said Cathy Lui, spokeswoman for the Standard Working Hours Committee, in response to covering live-in domestic workers. In a statement, the Hong Kong Federation of Asian Domestic Workers Unions, has demanded the committee to include living domestic helpers in its deliberation for SWHS. "The consultation document says that certain countries exclude domestic workers in their SWH regulations," the statement says. "The lack of regulation on working hours of live-in domestic workers would send the wrong message to employers that they can order their helpers to work 24-hours a day." "The selective information by the committee suggests that domestic workers' cannot have SWH protection," statement says. Canada includes live-in maids in their labour laws and has set the standard hours of work at eight hours per day and 40 hours per week. If Hong Kong is to follow suit, Ms Hinalan, who works more than 10 hours a day, would receive overtime pay. But she doesn't want to see that happen because she is worried about losing her job. "(My employer) may have to pay me a lot more, so …

School Sites Forgotten

  • 2016-01-27
  • 2016-01-27

  by Fred Lai Every day before 6 am, more than 25,000 primary school kids start their day by marching through the still-asleep Shenzhen city to its border with Hong Kong, where they take school buses heading towards different parts of the city, from North District to Lan Tau in the south.

Politics

Hong Kong's Young Activists Want to Learn from Taiwan Election

  • 2016-01-21

(TYR's reporters interview Joshua Wong in Taipei) by Jennie Tang and Sing Lee A group of Hong Kong pro-democracy activists are in Taiwan to witness the island's presidential and parlaimentary election this Saturday. Among them, Joshua Wong, convenor of student group Scholarism. "It's really different [from] Hong Kong because Hong Kong [doesn't have] universal suffrage," said the 19-year-old activist. "I want to learn about the advertising and promotion strategies because they can be a reference to politicians in Hong Kong ,'' he added. He believes mass movement is the way to raise political awareness of young people. "Voters and the general public have more incentive to engage in election[s] if [they are] more free and open," Joshua said. Lester Shum Ngo-fai, the former deputy secretary-general of the Hong Kong Federation of Students is also being invited to join the tour. "More and more young people in Taiwan and Hong Kong are dissatisfied with the traditional political parties," Lester said. "The parties in Hong Kong can learn from the newly-founded New Power Party ( NPP) in Taiwan when collecting the public views, especially the voices of young people." The NPP conducted a primary election online in which anyone over 15 years old can nominate and vote for the party's parliamentary election candidates. Around 47,000 people have voted. He believes Hong Kong people would welcome this form of democracy. More than 30 so-called Umbrella Movement soldeirs are travelling with the student leaders. Rigel Lee Ka-wai, of the Chu Hai College of Higher Education student union, for example, hopes to find ways to improve Hong Kong's political system through this experience. Ip Chi-hin of an activist group, Student Fight for Democracy, helped to organise the student visitors. "Taiwan's Sunflower Movement and Hong Kong's Umbrella Movement have encouraged young people to participate in elections …

Organ donation opt-out scheme may save lives

  • 2016-01-09
  • 2016-01-09

  by Alvin Kor Nineteen-year-old Jamella Mangali Lo needed a double lung transplan. She didn't get it. In October, she passed away after two anxious weeks of waiting. Since her death, the Hong Kong government announced it will resume the debate on making all citizens potential organ donors unless they explicitly state their objections. But experts doubt whether the so-called "opt-out scheme" can be implemented in a society dominated by traditional beliefs about life and death. The number of voluntary organ donors in Hong Kong is not keeping up with the rising demand for organs. Nearly 3,000 people are currently waiting for transplants, according to government figures. Although Hong Kong has seen an overall increase in organ donation, from about 4.2 donors per million people in 2005 to about 5.4 in 2015, the figures lag behind those in other developed societies. The United States has 27 organ donors per million people while Spain has 36. Secretary for Food and Health, Dr Ko Wing-man said the government will discuss the possibility of an optout scheme to boost the city's donation rate. Under the scheme, all Hong Kong residents will be put onto the donors list unless they submit an objection letter. Spain, the first country to adopt the opt-out organ donation system, has the world's highest donation rate. There are organ donation coordinators at every hospital. They counsel the patients and their families, and help facilitate their communication with medical workers. This successful "Spanish model" has prompted other countries, including the United Kingdom, to discuss the possibility of having a similar system. Twenty-four European countries have adopted opt-out schemes. But it is questionnable whether a majority of Hong Kongers can accept the idea of giving away organs after death. Yip Chun-hin, a 22-year-old university student, thought that this practice could be difficult to implement, because according to traditional Chinese beliefs, organ removal amount sot desecration of the dead. The belief is that the body needs to be buried whole and …

Supervision, education needed to reduce stray cat numbers

  • 2016-01-09
  • 2016-01-09

  by Phoebe Chau Hong Kong streets have become too crowded, even for cats. Some of them have to be killed, the governent says. A total of 6,053 cats were enthanised from 2011 to 2013, according to government figures. But some orginazations in Hong Kong say serilization is better than euthanasia. A plan named "Trap-Neuter-Return" was introduced in 2000, aiming to ease the problem of too many wild cats by reducing their birth rate instead of euthanizing them. The Hong Kong Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals been practicing TNR for 15 years and sterilised 51,000 stray cats. Meanwhile, The Hong Kong Non-Profit making Veterinary Clinic has been running the Community Animal De-sexing Project since 2008, which works the same way as TNR, and so far has sterilised 1,310 cats. "It is the most effective and civilised way to help homeless cats," said Zoie Cheng Kam-shan, public relations manager at the Hong Kong NPV. But sterilisation, which is carried out only in certain territories, isn't getting the task done. "The reproduction speed is too high," Ms Cheng said. "There can be six to eight baby cats per litter." The Dogs and Cats Ordinance contains no specific regulations for cats as they are seen as less threatening than dogs. "The Hong Kong government has extremely poor regulations on animal breeders," said Vivian Chiu, an education manager at SPCA. Ms Chiu said 90 percent of cats for sale in pet shops come from illegal breeders. Hobby breeders will not need any license for breeding. "Hobby breeders are exploiting the loopholes of the regulations," Ms Chiu said. "The result is cats are growing up in places like hell. Most of the cats raised by them are fragile." Some people try to help the cats on their own. "I have fed the …

High rent brings the final chapter in local book stores

  • 2016-01-09
  • 2016-01-09

by Terrance Zheng   On October 25, Sam Wong Bo-long and his staff took the last photo together at Spirit Bookstore in Sai Wan. They bid farewell to the second-hand bookselling business founded by Wong's grandfather in 1958. "We really don't want to leave the neighbourhood," he said. "We will surely come back if we have the chance in future." Spirit Bookstore, first opened in Mong Kok, relocated to Sai Wan some ten years ago when the rent skyrocketed. History has repeated itself and this time Mr Wong, the third generation in this family business, has to shut down the store. Rent in West Central District is set to rise mainly because of the MTR's Island Line western extension. Rent for the 500-square-feet space soared to around $40,000 per month and Mr Wong is forced to say goodbye to the neighbourhood. "We were hoping to tough it out but the situation has not improved," Mr Wong said. "Even small bookstores upstairs in building in Mong Kok would rent more than $30,000 a month." Mr Wong admitted the lack of online promotion might be a cause of the decline of his shop but the reading attitudes among Hongkongers, he said, have also changed. "When people want to relax, they go shopping and watch movies, but they would seldom read a book in a quiet corner." He said many Taiwan readers would travel from urban areas to small bookstores in the peripheries of the city. But that, he believed, is unlikely in Hong Kong. Some old local bookstores including Dymocks and Well Read Shop, also closed earlier this year because of soaring renting. But that has not not deterred Taiwanese bookstore chain, Eslite, to expand. The chain has opened up its second store in the city. The shop in Tsim Sha Tsui offers other services besides book selling, including light meals, shoes and accessories. "It's just a trend. Bookstore chains with a …

Politics

Lack of quorum halts controversial internet Article 23

  • 2015-12-11

by Julianna Wu   Debate arose among online freedom of speech after the controversial Copyright Amendment Bill meeting was adjourned in Legislative Council yesterday. After five times' quorum called by pan-democrats, only 29 legislators, below the requisite 35, showed up, president of Legislative Council Jasper Tsang Yok-sing had no choice but cancelled the meeting. Before the meeting, pan-democrats said they would take legal moves in Legislative Council to delay the bill's second reading, which was restarted after the latest amendment on 2014. In the latest version of Copyright Amendment Bill, the government has revised its proposal and allows exemptions under the "fair use" criteria. According to Secretary of Commerce and Economic Development Gregory So Kam-leung, the new added six exemptions are "parodies, satires, caricatures, pastiches, and current affairs commentaries." But still, online secondary creations such as new lyrics to existing tunes, live broadcast game playing, comic cosplay, and others, could face criminal liability if the bill is passed. Plenty of online users commented on the Government Information Services Department's official Facebook page that the division of exemptions are unclear and they are afraid the bill would become a political tool striking freedom of speech. Keyboard Frontline, a voluntary internet freedom defending organization founded in 2011, said the exemption should include but not limit to these six ones. They requested the government to broader the criteria by applying the word "such as" to the examples. This criteria of "open exemption" is used by the US in her copyright bill, according to spokeswoman of Keyboard Frontline Glacier Kwong Chung-ching. Government said some relevant organizations, such as the record companies and songwriters, have signed deal with Youtube, a video-sharing website, to ensure the platform does not infringe the copyright if people upload their work and share there. But online users, such as uploaders …