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Received today — 1 May 2026 Hong Kong Free Press HKFP

HKFP Lens: ‘Bodies in Motion, Bodies at Rest’ – Gareth Brown’s 19 years of dance photography

1 May 2026 at 01:00
"Bodies in motion" series by Hong Kong photographer Gareth Brown.

Hong Kong photographer Gareth Brown has spent the past 19 years working on a personal project called “Bodies in Motion, Bodies at Rest” – using dance to showcase the city’s unique spots.

Hong Kong Dance Company dancer Debby Chuang at a derelict industrial building in Tsing Yi, reputedly a major paint factory operated by Swire in post-war Hong Kong. Photo: Gareth Brown.
Hong Kong Dance Company dancer Debby Chuang at a derelict industrial building in Tsing Yi, reputedly a major paint factory operated by Swire in post-war Hong Kong. Photo: Gareth Brown.

For what he called a “very personal passion project,” he photographed ballerinas, contemporary and traditional dancers, as well as artistic swimmers and aerialists, against the backdrop of heritage buildings, natural landscapes, and modern infrastructure.

Dance artist Sudhee Liao at Pun Uk, a Meixian Hakka mansion in Yuen Long, dating back to 1934. The building was built by Hakka businessman Pun Kwan-min, who contributed financially to the 1911 Revolution to overthrow the Qing dynasty. In 1938, future Chinese premier Zhou Enlai stayed at Pun Uk. The mansion has a Grade II listing, and though seemingly sound, the structure has been left derelict for many years. Photo: Gareth Brown.
Dance artist Sudhee Liao at Pun Uk, a Meixian Hakka mansion in Yuen Long, dating back to 1934. The building was built by Hakka businessman Pun Kwan-min, who contributed financially to the 1911 Revolution to overthrow the Qing dynasty. In 1938, future Chinese premier Zhou Enlai stayed at Pun Uk. The mansion has a Grade II listing, and though seemingly sound, the structure has been left derelict for many years. Photo: Gareth Brown.
Aquatic performers Nora Cho, Grace Pang, Carmen Leung, Michelle Pang, and Chan Hoi-lam - members of the Hong Kong artistic swim team - at a river pool in Sheung Luk Stream, Sai Kung. The photo was taken before the deeper pools became popular with social media influencers and daredevil tombstoners. Photo: Gareth Brown.
Aquatic performers Nora Cho, Grace Pang, Carmen Leung, Michelle Pang, and Chan Hoi-lam – members of the Hong Kong artistic swim team – at a river pool in Sheung Luk Stream, Sai Kung. The photo was taken before the deeper pools became popular with social media influencers and daredevil tombstoners. Photo: Gareth Brown.
Suku Limbu and Sajna Gurung, from the Hong Kong Nepalese Dance Group, at the Hindu Temple in Burma Lines, the former Queen’s Hill Army Camp in Fanling. The abandoned temple is a visually striking architectural gem. Designed as a place of worship for the Gurkhas of the British army, its hexagonal shape is reminiscent of a lotus blossom. Photo: Gareth Brown.
Suku Limbu and Sajna Gurung, from the Hong Kong Nepalese Dance Group, at the Hindu Temple in Burma Lines, the former Queen’s Hill Army Camp in Fanling. The abandoned temple is a visually striking architectural gem. Designed as a place of worship for the Gurkhas of the British army, its hexagonal shape is reminiscent of a lotus blossom. Photo: Gareth Brown.

“Over the years, I’ve kept the works mostly to myself, dance and heritage friends,” said Brown, who is originally from the UK.

Having amassed a large collection, “I’m attempting to bring it to the attention of a wider audience.”

Contemporary dancer-choreographer Abby Chan at the Kam Tin Tree House, where the roots of a massive banyan tree have intertwined with the remains of an ancient study hall. It is located in Kam Tin, a historic traditional village  famous for its many temples. Photo: Gareth Brown.
Contemporary dancer-choreographer Abby Chan at the Kam Tin Tree House, where the roots of a massive banyan tree have intertwined with the remains of an ancient study hall. It is located in Kam Tin, a historic traditional village famous for its many temples. Photo: Gareth Brown.
Former Hong Kong Ballet star Irene Lo, now associate director of the Hong Kong Academy of Ballet, at the House of Convenience, or Fong Pin Yuen in Cantonese, on the outskirts of Tai O, Lantau Island. The facility was established by a Buddhist woman named Yip Sin-hoi in 1934 for seriously ill and dying patients to pass their final days. Photo: Gareth Brown.
Former Hong Kong Ballet star Irene Lo, now associate director of the Hong Kong Academy of Ballet, at the House of Convenience, or Fong Pin Yuen in Cantonese, on the outskirts of Tai O, Lantau Island. The facility was established by a Buddhist woman named Yip Sin-hoi in 1934 for seriously ill and dying patients to pass their final days. Photo: Gareth Brown.

The photographer said he usually found locations of interest – “culturally, historically, or they just look good” – and then chose dancers who best fitted the spot.

For example, at a river pool in Sheung Luk Stream, Sai Kung, he worked with members of the Hong Kong artistic swim team. At an abandoned Gurkha Hindu temple in Burma Lines, he collaborated with traditional dancers from the Nepalese community. An aerialist posed at a wall tree of the former Tung Chi College on Ship Street, which has since been demolished.

Prima ballerina Faye Leung, previously senior principal at Hong Kong Ballet, at Island Eastern Corridor, a prime example of the ambitious mass infrastructure projects that embody Hong Kong's can-do spirit. The ballerina’s movements, full of power and grace, pay homage to this remarkable feat of modern engineering. Photo: Gareth Brown.
Prima ballerina Faye Leung, previously senior principal at Hong Kong Ballet, at Island Eastern Corridor, a prime example of the ambitious mass infrastructure projects that embody Hong Kong’s can-do spirit. The ballerina’s movements, full of power and grace, pay homage to this remarkable feat of modern engineering. Photo: Gareth Brown.
Joana Cambeses, an aerialist and acrobatic performer, at a wall tree at the former Tung Chi College, on Ship Street in Wan Chai. The site has been redeveloped since the image was taken. In the last century, civil engineers utilised the roots of wall trees to reinforce retaining walls. Some of the most impressive examples were to be found on Ship Street. Photo: Gareth Brown.
Joana Cambeses, an aerialist and acrobatic performer, hanging from a wall tree at the former Tung Chi College, on Ship Street in Wan Chai. The building has been redeveloped since the image was taken. Some of the most impressive wall trees could be found on Ship Street. Photo: Gareth Brown.
Contemporary dancer Sarah Xiao at the 33-metre historic granite edifice at Tai Tam Upper Reservoir Dam. Photo: Gareth Brown.
Contemporary dancer Sarah Xiao at the 33-metre historic granite edifice at Tai Tam Upper Reservoir Dam. Photo: Gareth Brown.

“If nothing else, the project is an interesting historical record of the [Hong Kong] dance industry, as well as locations that no longer exist or probably won’t exist for much longer,” Brown said.

The project gave him the chance to work with some of the city’s prominent dancers, such as Hong Kong Ballet principal dancer Yang Ruiqi, former Hong Kong Dance Company principal dancer Laura Pan, and dancer-choreographer Abby Chan.

Contemporary dancer-choreographer Flora Hon and actor-dancer Rick Cheung at Sunset Peak, Hong Kong's third-highest peak, on Lantau Island. At the summit, there are 20 small concrete huts, constructed by missionaries in the 1920s. Legend has it that the huts served as a refuge from the sweltering heat and humidity of Hong Kong summers, as well as from the many spiritual distractions in the burgeoning city. Photo: Gareth Brown.
Contemporary dancer-choreographer Flora Hon and actor-dancer Rick Cheung at Sunset Peak, Hong Kong’s third-highest peak, on Lantau Island. At the summit, there are 20 small concrete huts, constructed by missionaries in the 1920s. Legend has it that the huts served as a refuge from the sweltering heat and humidity of Hong Kong summers, as well as from the many spiritual distractions in the burgeoning city. Photo: Gareth Brown.
Contemporary dancer Siobhan Dumigan braves cold temperatures at Cape D’Aguilar Battery, on the southernmost tip of Hong Kong Island. The World War II relic sits on a rocky outcrop in a hostile environment. Photo: Gareth Brown.
Contemporary dancer Siobhan Dumigan braves cold temperatures at Cape D’Aguilar Battery, on the southernmost tip of Hong Kong Island. The World War II relic sits on a rocky outcrop in a hostile environment. Photo: Gareth Brown.

“I’ve been very lucky,” the photographer said of the collaborations.

At the heels of Brown’s solo exhibition at the Foreign Correspondents’ Club last year and another show at the Hong Kong Dance Awards ceremony last week, “Bodies in Motion, Bodies at Rest” is currently on display at The Corner Shop, a small gallery in Tsim Sha Tsui managed by the hotel Mondrian Hong Kong.

The exhibition will run until May 17.

Hong Kong Ballet principal dancer Yang Ruiqi at Plover Cove Reservoir Sub Dam in Tai Mei Tuk. The reservoir was the first freshwater coastal lake to be built in Hong Kong. The dam has a contrasting outlook on either side - the front has a soft, bright more pleasing aesthetic. Photo: Gareth Brown.
Hong Kong Ballet principal dancer Yang Ruiqi at Plover Cove Reservoir in Tai Mei Tuk, the first freshwater coastal lake to be built in Hong Kong. The dam has a clean, futuristic aesthetic. Photo: Gareth Brown.
Laura Pan, former principal dancer at the Hong Kong Dance Company, at Shek Lo, an imposing abandoned colonial mansion in Fanling. The building - built in 1924 by Peter Tsui, founder of Wah Yan College - is a blend of Chinese and European architectural styles. Having been uninhabited since the 1980s, the Grade 1 historic structure has become a sanctuary for a large colony of bats. Photo: Gareth Brown.
Laura Pan, former principal dancer at the Hong Kong Dance Company, at Shek Lo, an imposing abandoned colonial mansion in Fanling. The building – built in 1924 by Peter Tsui, founder of Wah Yan College – is a blend of Chinese and European architectural styles. Having been uninhabited since the 1980s, the Grade 1 historic structure has become a sanctuary for a large colony of bats. Photo: Gareth Brown.
Modern dancer-choreographer Lemon Doo and dance partner Tonia Wan at the futuristic Innovation Tower, designed by Zaha Hadid. The building, located on the campus of the Hong Kong Polytechnic University in Hung Hom, has fluid curves with an ethereal, otherworldly appearance. Photo: Gareth Brown.
Modern dancer-choreographer Lemon Doo and dance partner Tonia Wan at the Innovation Tower, designed by Zaha Hadid. The futuristic-looking building, located on the campus of the Hong Kong Polytechnic University in Hung Hom, has fluid curves with an ethereal, otherworldly appearance. Photo: Gareth Brown.
  • Exhibition: “Bodies in Motion, Bodies at Rest” – Photography by Gareth Brown.
  • Dates: April 20 – May 17, 2026.
  • Opening Hours: 11am to 11pm.
  • Venue: The Corner Shop by Mondrian, 11A-11D Hart Avenue, Tsim Sha Tsui.

‘Not good enough’: Key points from gov’t departments’ testimony at Tai Po fire inquiry

1 May 2026 at 00:00
Andy Yeung, director of fire services, testifies before an independent committee investigating the massive Tai Po fire in Hong Kong, on April 24, 2026. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.

In the second half of April, the public inquiry into the deadly Tai Po blaze heard from multiple government departments about authorities’ oversight during a major renovation at Wang Fuk Court before the tragedy unfolded.

Andy Yeung, director of fire services, testifies before an independent committee investigating the massive Tai Po fire in Hong Kong, on April 24, 2026. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.
Andy Yeung, director of fire services, testifies before an independent committee investigating the massive Tai Po fire in Hong Kong, on April 24, 2026. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.

In the first 10 days of the hearings, residents gave damning testimony of how their complaints about potential fire hazards during the renovation had fallen on deaf ears. Departments passed around their complaints, and when officers did inspect the housing estate in Tai Po, they said they failed to find evidence of irregularities.

During the 11 days of hearings from April 13 to Friday, a number of high-ranking officials and frontline officers acknowledged that the ways departments handled residents’ complaints were “not good enough” and that things could have been “done better.”

Victor Dawes, the lead lawyer for the independent committee investigating the inferno, summed it up well last week.

“During this inquiry, it appears that all government departments agree that things were not ideal. I have lost count of how many times we have heard, ‘Not good enough,” he said in Cantonese.

Judge David Lok, the committee chair, also noted that the blaze had exposed a “grey area” in which government departments lacked clear communication and a demarcation of responsibility for specific fire hazards.

So far, witnesses from the Fire Services Department, the Labour Department, the Buildings Department, the Home Affairs Department, and the Urban Renewal Authority have testified before the committee. Here is the summary.

Fire department as ‘ultimate gatekeeper’

The Fire Services Department (FSD) has the highest number of witnesses among government departments so far, with a total of 14 officers – ranging from frontline commanders to the director of fire services, Andy Yeung.

In his testimony on April 24, Yeung – the first departmental chief to testify – touched on several issues relating to the FSD’s oversight of fire hazards arising from building renovation projects.

Yeung also corrected the accounts given by some of his senior subordinates who had earlier given testimony.

Judge David Lok (centre), chair of the independent committee tasked with investigating the Tai Po fire, at City Gallery, Central, on April 24, 2026. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.
Judge David Lok (centre), chair of the independent committee tasked with investigating the Tai Po fire, at City Gallery, Central, on April 24, 2026. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.

For example, Michael Yung, assistant director of fire safety at the FSD, told the committee on April 22 that fire hazards like non-fire-retardant scaffold netting, flammable foam boards and workers smoking on construction sites fell outside the department’s purview.

The FSD is only responsible for “active” fire safety measures, such as alarm systems, and lacks the expertise on construction work, Yung said, while risks concerning construction materials fall under the purview of the Buildings Department.

Yeung, the fire services chief, said otherwise. He agreed with Dawes when the lawyer suggested that the FSD should be the “ultimate gatekeeper” to eradicate fire risks.

Yeung said the FSD and the Buildings Department should complement each other when it comes to mitigating fire risks, citing the experience following the fatal mini-storage unit fire in 2016, which killed two firefighters.

At that time, there was no law regulating the size of and the distance between storage units, Yeung recalled.

After the 2016 blaze, the FSD and the Buildings Department worked together to develop the regulations, ensuring they aligned with fire safety, as well as other structural elements, such as lighting and ventilation.

The Fire Services Department brought Wednesday's deadly Tai Po fire under control in the early hours of November 27, 2025.
The Fire Services Department brought Wednesday’s deadly Tai Po fire under control in the early hours of November 27, 2025. File photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.

Yeung said that, following the Tai Po fire, the two departments had conducted a review of several issues, such as wooden boards in emergency staircases – which served as temporary openings for workers to access bamboo scaffolding – and foam boards used to protect windows from falling debris.

He also said both departments could make prosecutions and that inter-departmental communication would be improved regarding enforcement.

Labour Department admits shortcomings

On April 21, three occupational safety officers from the Labour Department, including the chief officer of operations, Murphy Yuen, testified before the committee.

Lam Sau-ching, an occupational safety officer who had handled Wang Fuk Court residents’ complaints, said the department conducted a total of 17 inspections, none of which found evidence of workers smoking.

“When officers say the complaint could not be justified, they meant that during the inspection, they could not see evidence for the complaint,” Lam said in Cantonese.

Lee Shu-wun, a lawyer for the independent committee, said workers may have smoked even though the department did not find any evidence, to which Lam agreed.

Hong Kong's Labour Department. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.
Hong Kong’s Labour Department. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.

Lam admitted that an e-mail response she wrote to a resident to address a complaint regarding the fire-retardant quality of scaffold netting “could be improved.” In the e-mail, Lam mistakenly said the Labour Department had no regulations on the fire-resistance quality of the nets.

She also admitted that the department did not check the issue dates on fire-retardancy certificates submitted by Prestige Construction & Engineering, the main contractor for Wang Fuk Court’s renovation.

Yuen, the chief officer of operations, said the Labour Department could have referred to a list of approved laboratories provided by the Housing Department to check the authenticity of certificates, but his department still relied on the contractor’s integrity.

“If some contractors are bent on tricking us, there is nothing we can do other than refer the case to law enforcement agencies,” he said in Cantonese.

Li Man-pong, a senior occupational safety officer, said the installation of wooden boards in emergency staircases did not breach labour safety regulations as it was to facilitate workers accessing bamboo scaffolding safely.

Judge Lok said Li’s account appeared to suggest a conflict of interest between workers and residents.

The committee had previously heard that the temporary openings allowed smoke to enter the emergency staircases, accelerating the spread inside the buildings and trapping residents.

Buildings Department contradicts ICU

On Monday, two Buildings Department members testified before the committee.

Karen Cheung, assistant director of mandatory building inspection, said both access openings for workers and foam boards used to seal windows violate the city’s building construction regulations.

Not only did Cheung’s testimony differ from that of the Labour Department officers, her account also appeared to contradict a written submission by Andy Ku, a senior surveyor of the Housing Bureau’s Independent Checking Unit (ICU).

The ICU oversees construction works at government-subsidised housing estates like Wang Fuk Court.

The blackened exterior of an apartment block in Wang Fuk Court, Tai Po, on November 27, 2025, with what appears to be styrofoam boards attached to the windows. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.
The blackened exterior of an apartment block in Wang Fuk Court, Tai Po, on November 27, 2025, with what appears to be styrofoam boards attached to the windows. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.

According to Ku’s submission, Hong Kong’s laws do not regulate the use of foam boards because they are “temporary materials.” It is unclear if Ku will testify before the committee in person.

However, Cheung said using foam boards to cover windows extensively violated regulations as the laws stipulate that every unit of a residential building should have natural light and ventilation.

When asked by Dawes about her discrepancy with Ku regarding the regulations, Cheung said: “I think Mr Ku should be the one explaining this point.”

Cheung also said the Buildings Department would never inform contractors ahead of an inspection following a complaint. Officers would only seek the contractor’s assistance when they need to collect samples of construction materials for testing, she said.

The committee previously heard that the ICU had notified the consultant firm of Wang Fuk Court’s renovation project, Will Power Architects, about details of scaffold netting checks in advance.

Jenkin Suen, representing the government in the hearings, defended the ICU’s practice last month. He said at the time that inspections carried out by Buildings Department officers would also inform the inspected parties in advance.

Cheung declined to comment on the ICU’s practice. However, when pressed by Dawes, Cheung said: “This is not how we do things generally.”

Foam boards used to seal windows are visible in a Wang Fuk Court building in Tai Po after the deadly fire. File photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.
Foam boards used to seal windows are visible in a Wang Fuk Court building in Tai Po after the deadly fire. File photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.

In his written statement, Ku said that he consulted with Tse Kam-ming, a former senior building surveyor at the Buildings Department who was seconded to the ICU between 2023 and 2025, regarding foam boards used at Wang Fuk Court.

However, Tse told the committee that he had no recollection of giving any advice to Ku regarding the matter.

Tse called it “unacceptable” to dismiss foam board hazards, citing the 2017 Grenfell Tower fire in the United Kingdom as a warning of the dangers posed by combustible cladding and foam.

Home Affairs Department on district councillors

Also testifying on Monday was Chan Hau-man, former Tai Po district officer at the Home Affairs Department, who spoke about district councillors.

Multiple residents had testified that Tai Po South District Councillor Peggy Wong, a member of the pro-Beijing Democratic Alliance for the Betterment and Progress of Hong Kong (DAB), had amassed proxy votes from residents and interfered with meetings about renovation matters.

Wong denied the allegations in a written submission to the committee, saying she had only voted on behalf of residents twice during a residents’ meeting that sought to oust a controversial owners’ committee. On both occasions, Wong voted against the motion.

Tai Po South councillor Peggy Wong, a member of the Democratic Alliance for the Betterment and Progress of Hong Kong (DAB), in 2024. Photo: Peggy Wong, via Facebook.
Tai Po South District Councillor Peggy Wong, a member of the Democratic Alliance for the Betterment and Progress of Hong Kong (DAB), in 2024. Photo: Peggy Wong, via Facebook.

Chan said her department “respects” district councillors when it comes to estate affairs, as long as they do not violate any law.

A district councillor has their own “community network,” and authorities respect that they may have an opinion and provide advice to residents regarding renovation, Chan added.

While current regulations do not specify an upper limit on the number of proxy votes a person can acquire, the department is reviewing whether a cap is needed, she said.

Urban Renewal Authority on bid-rigging risks

On Thursday, the committee heard testimony from Matthew Chan, a case manager for the Urban Renewal Authority (URA), which oversaw tender applications for the renovation work at Wang Fuk Court, a government-subsidised housing estate.

He said that the semi-government department had not considered the risks of bid-rigging in the tendering process for the large-scale renovation at the estate.

After securing the contract at a low price, Will Power Architects was able to “rig” the tendering process in favour of Prestige Construction & Engineering, an affiliated contractor, and carried out “rubber-stamp” inspections.

When Dawes presented a 2016 Competition Commission report on the prevalence of bid-rigging in Hong Kong’s building maintenance industry, Chan said that the URA did not take such risks into account despite being aware of rampant collusive tendering.

The case manager also said that the URA “would not comment on [Will Powers’] professionalism,” as the authority trusted the consultant’s experience and would want to avoid appearing biased or intervening in the owners’ board’s affairs.

The URA receives more than 10,000 tenders every year and has no ability to scrutinise every application in detail, Chan said.

Received yesterday — 30 April 2026 Hong Kong Free Press HKFP
  • ✇Hong Kong Free Press HKFP
  • China’s April factory activity expands despite Middle East war AFP
    China’s factory activity grew for a second straight month in April, official data showed Thursday, showing resilience despite surging energy prices and shipping disruption caused by the war in the Middle East. This picture shows cars made by MG on a dock before being loaded onto a ship for export at the port in Lianyungang, in China’s eastern Jiangsu province on April 29, 2026. Photo: CN-STR/AFP/China OUT. The manufacturing purchasing manager’s index –- a key measure of industrial activit
     

China’s April factory activity expands despite Middle East war

By: AFP
30 April 2026 at 09:46
China middle east economy

China’s factory activity grew for a second straight month in April, official data showed Thursday, showing resilience despite surging energy prices and shipping disruption caused by the war in the Middle East.

This picture shows cars made by MG on a dock before being loaded onto a ship for export at the port in Lianyungang, in China’s eastern Jiangsu province on April 29, 2026. Photo: CN-STR/AFP/China OUT.
This picture shows cars made by MG on a dock before being loaded onto a ship for export at the port in Lianyungang, in China’s eastern Jiangsu province on April 29, 2026. Photo: CN-STR/AFP/China OUT.

The manufacturing purchasing manager’s index –- a key measure of industrial activity — was 50.3 in April, according to the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), above the 50-point mark that divides expansion and contraction.

That figure fell from 50.4 in March, but was ahead of a forecast of 50.1 in a Bloomberg survey of economists.

The world’s second-largest economy has been struggling with a slowdown in domestic demand and investment in recent years that has weighed on its vast manufacturing sector.

March’s figure was the highest in a year, with manufacturing activity contracting in 10 out of 11 months before that.

April’s statistics showed economic output had “maintained expansion” while manufacturing “continued to show a positive trend”, according to NBS statistician Huo Lihui.

There was strong demand for electrical and IT equipment, but weaker market activity for petroleum and coal processing, Huo said in a statement.

But manufacturers faced higher costs as the prices of raw materials rose significantly, particularly in the energy and chemical sectors, Huo said.

Beijing's central business district with the Forbidden City in the foreground. File photo: Wikicommons.
Beijing’s central business district with the Forbidden City in the foreground. File photo: Wikicommons.

The data suggests Chinese producers remain resilient despite global economic disruption caused by the US-Israeli war with Iran that has seen energy prices surge and Tehran restrict access to the vital Strait of Hormuz.

“The PMI index shows the manufacturing sector has not been adversely affected by the conflict in the Middle East,” according to Zhiwei Zhang, president and chief economist at Pinpoint Asset Management.

“The monetary policy stance seems to have a marginally loosening bias, which helps to mitigate the higher energy prices,” he said in a note.

Julian Evans-Pritchard at Capital Economics added that exports and strong external demand were the main drivers.

“Soaring demand for memory chips and green tech products likely played a key role,” he said.

Despite the positive factory data, China’s non-manufacturing PMI — a gauge of activity across services and construction — slumped to 49.4 in April, down from 50.1 in March.

Business activity in the wholesale and retail sectors contracted, suggesting consumer demand remains weak.

Urban Renewal Authority did not consider bid-rigging risks at Wang Fuk Court, fire inquiry hears

30 April 2026 at 08:02
Urban Renewal Authority did not consider bid-rigging risks at Wang Fuk Court, investigation hears

The authority that oversaw tender applications for the renovation work at the fire-hit Wang Fuk Court had not considered the risks of illegal tendering practices, a case manager has told an inquiry into the deadly blaze.

A tender document listing Prestige Construction & Engineering Company as the top-rated contractor for maintenance works at Wang Fuk Court. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.
A tender document listing Prestige Construction & Engineering Company as the top-rated contractor for maintenance works at Wang Fuk Court. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.

Testifying on Thursday, Matthew Chan, a case manager for the Urban Renewal Authority (URA), said the semi-government body had not considered the risks of bid-rigging in the tendering process for the large-scale renovation at Wang Fuk Court, a government-subsidised housing estate in Tai Po.

In a typical bid-rigging scheme, a consultancy firm usually offers a low price to oversee renovation or construction work at a fraction of the market rate.

In the case of Wang Fuk Court, where the massive fire in November killed 168 people and displaced thousands of residents, Will Power Architects was chosen to oversee the renovation project after offering a HK$308,000 consultancy fee and another HK$220,000 to inspect the entire estate.

The consultancy firm then had the opportunity to “rig” the tendering process in favour of Prestige Construction & Engineering, an affiliated contractor and carried out ineffective “rubber-stamp” inspections, the independent committee investigating the cause of the fire heard last month.

Despite being aware that there was a significant range of prices submitted for the renovation contract – with deceptively cheap consultancy fees at the lower end – the URA did not intervene in the bidding procedure, Chan told Victor Dawes, the lead counsel for the committee.

‘We wouldn’t intervene’

The URA case manager said that price discrepancies were common for various reasons, such as when a newcomer in the field wanted to gain experience by offering lower prices.

Wang Fuk Court in Tai Po, pictured on November 28, 2025, in the aftermath of the fatal blaze. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.
Wang Fuk Court in Tai Po, pictured on November 28, 2025, in the aftermath of the fatal blaze. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.

Chan told Dawes that he did not analyse whether the prices were reasonable.

“We wouldn’t intervene in the decision-making process of the owners’ corporation,” Chan said.

Dawes asked Chan whether he had thought Will Power’s price seemed “suspiciously cheap.” The case manager said that it did, “in terms of the number,” but added that he did not dwell on any possible wrongdoing involved.

Chan also said that the URA had “no role” in hiring the registered inspector and consultancy firm for Wang Fuk Court’s renovation work despite the service contract stipulating that it should have done so.

When Dawes presented a 2016 Competition Commission report on the prevalence of bid-rigging in Hong Kong’s building maintenance industry, Chan said that the URA did not take such risks into account despite being aware of rampant collusive tendering.

Chan also said that the URA “would not comment on [Will Powers’] professionalism,” as the authority trusted the consultant’s experience and would want to avoid appearing biased.

He also told the hearing that the URA receives more than 10,000 tenders every year and has no ability to scrutinise every application in detail.

Chan added that the URA’s “Smart Tender” platform, which anonymises the bidding procedure and arranges third-party price estimates to provide a fairer tendering process, could not address risks “with 100 per cent certainty.”

  • ✇Hong Kong Free Press HKFP
  • Australia foreign minister says China agrees to collaborate on jet fuel exports AFP
    Australia’s foreign minister said Wednesday that China has agreed to work together to facilitate exports of jet fuel, in an attempt to ease supply disruptions caused by the war in the Middle East. Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong. File photo: Penny Wong, via Facebook. The conflict and closure of the Strait of Hormuz, through which a fifth of the world’s crude oil transits, have caused fuel prices to soar and left many Asia-Pacific nations facing an energy crisis. China, a major e
     

Australia foreign minister says China agrees to collaborate on jet fuel exports

By: AFP
30 April 2026 at 06:55
Penny Wong featured image

Australia’s foreign minister said Wednesday that China has agreed to work together to facilitate exports of jet fuel, in an attempt to ease supply disruptions caused by the war in the Middle East.

Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong attends the Declaration for the Protection of Humanitarian Personnel Signing Ceremony and Vigil held at the United Nations Headquarters in New York on September 21, 2025. Photo: Penny Wong, via Facebook.
Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong. File photo: Penny Wong, via Facebook.

The conflict and closure of the Strait of Hormuz, through which a fifth of the world’s crude oil transits, have caused fuel prices to soar and left many Asia-Pacific nations facing an energy crisis.

China, a major exporter of jet fuel and diesel to Australia and other countries, has avoided the worst of the war’s energy impacts thanks to its vast oil stocks, but paused exports at the start of the war to protect its domestic supplies.

“I can confirm… that the Chinese government is facilitating engagement with Australian businesses on jet fuel,” Foreign Minister Penny Wong told reporters in Beijing, following talks with her Chinese counterpart Wang Yi and Chinese Vice President Han Zheng.

She added that the move was “an important step, however, it is the first step”.

Earlier in the day, Wong pressed her case to Han, telling him that refineries in the Indo-Pacific region have been disproportionately affected by the blockage of the Strait of Hormuz, according to an Australian foreign ministry readout.

In the talks, she called for greater reciprocity in trade, emphasizing that Australia’s steady supply of raw materials and food to China should be matched by a reliable flow of gasoline, kerosene and fertilizers back to Australia.

“I made the point that the import inputs China supplies to Australia, including jet fuel, support the Australian resources sector, which in turn helps to maintain the flow of commodities that are so important in the bilateral trading relationship,” Wong told the press conference.

China is set to resume exports in May with major state-owned companies applying for licenses to do so, the Financial Times reported Tuesday, citing industry sources.

Chinese authorities have not commented publicly on the matter.

During her talks with Chinese officials, Wong added: “We were able to speak frankly, as we do, about those areas of difference, including consular issues, human rights, foreign interference, and regional and international security.”

Hong Kong gov’t steps up measures at ecological hotspots ahead of Golden Week visitor surge

30 April 2026 at 06:23
eco-tourism

The Hong Kong government has introduced a string of measures to manage ecotourism hotspots in Sai Kung and Lantau Island, as a surge in visitors is expected during China’s upcoming Golden Week holiday.

The Agriculture, Fisheries and Conservation Department (AFCD) said in a statement on Wednesday that it would deploy drones and additional staff to patrol several hotspots – including Sharp Island and High Island Reservoir’s East Dam in Sai Kung, as well as Shui Hau on Lantau – from Friday to Tuesday.

Large crowds at Sharp Island, Sai Kung, on October 1, 2025. Photo: Greenpeace.
Large crowds at Sharp Island, Sai Kung, on October 1, 2025. Photo: Greenpeace.

The announcement comes two days before Labour Day, a public holiday in Hong Kong and the start of a five-day Golden Week holiday in mainland China.

“In addition, the AFCD will conduct joint patrols with the Food and Environmental Hygiene Department (FEHD) during the holiday to remind visitors not to litter, and the FEHD will also strengthen the cleaning of public areas on the island,” it said. “The AFCD will conduct joint sea patrols with the Marine Department and the Police to maintain order.”

The government has faced criticism over its management of ecological hotspots, especially after overtourism and visitors’ environmentally degrading behaviour during last year’s Golden Week holiday.

Jim Chu, assistant director at AFCD, said on RTHK on Wednesday that authorities expected 1,000 people to descend on Sharp Island daily during the Labour Day Golden Week – far higher than the average of 600 to 800 visitors during regular weekends and public holidays.

Sharp Island, Shui Hau

The coastal areas of Sharp Island and Shui Hau on Lantau Island are currently not designated as country parks, marine parks, or marine reserves, the AFCD said in the statement.

It also said it had installed footfall counters at the pier of Sharp Island and in Shui Hau to monitor visitor numbers and would set up booths and distribute leaflets to educate tourists about environmental protection and conservation.

“The AFCD is currently promoting environmental protection awareness among visitors through various publicity and educational efforts,” it said.

AFCD drone monitoring above the Po Pin Chau viewing platform near the East Dam of High Island Reservoir in Sai Kung. Photo: GovHK.
AFCD drone monitoring above the Po Pin Chau viewing platform near the East Dam of High Island Reservoir in Sai Kung. Photo: GovHK.

The AFCD will also cooperate with the WWF-Hong Kong to set up public education booths.

AFCD staff will “explain or advise” visitors if they display any potential behaviour that could cause ecological damage, such as damaging, disturbing, feeding, or collecting marine life, or entering the water near corals.

Greenpeace criticised the measures this week, saying they were advisory and lacked deterrence, describing them as “a toothless tiger.”

According to the NGO, the government is promoting 22 sites with high ecological value as tourist attractions, but they are not protected by Hong Kong’s environmental ordinances because they lie outside designated country parks and marine parks.

Sai Kung campsites

The AFCD also said it would step up monitoring of campsites at Ham Tin Wan, Sai Wan, and Long Ke Wan in Sai Kung East Country Park to reduce littering and maintain cleanliness.

AFCD staff member promoting environmental protection in a countryside campsite in Hong Kong. Photo: GovHK.
AFCD staff member promoting environmental protection in a countryside campsite in Hong Kong. Photo: GovHK.

“The AFCD will deploy additional staff day and night to patrol, be stationed, enforce regulations against violations, and use drones and CCTV systems to assist in monitoring the campsites,” it said.

Greenpeace said that Ham Tin Wan and Sai Wan campsites suffered from overcapacity and littering during the Lunar New Year holiday in February.

The government announced in March that it would introduce a campsite booking system by National Day.

Hong Kong remains at 140th on global press freedom index as NGO highlights Jimmy Lai’s 20-year jail term

30 April 2026 at 04:00
RSF 2026

Hong Kong remains at 140th place on Reporters Without Borders’ (RSF) global press freedom index of 180 countries and territories, with the NGO highlighting the 20-year sentence handed down to Apple Daily founder Jimmy Lai earlier this year.

Media watchdog Reporters Without Borders' 2026 world press freedom idnex. Photo: Reporters Without Borders.
Press freedom watchdog Reporters Without Borders’ 2026 world press freedom index. Photo: Reporters Without Borders.

The press freedom watchdog released its annual index on Thursday, ahead of World Press Freedom Day on Sunday.

Hong Kong’s position is unchanged from last year. At 140th place, between Rwanda and Syria, the city also remains in the “red zone” – meaning a “very serious” situation.

It has tumbled down press freedom indices since Beijing imposed a national security law in Hong Kong in 2020, in the wake of the pro-democracy protests and unrest that began the summer before.

In 2019, it was at 73rd place. From 2021 to 2022, it fell from 80 to 148, after independent media outlets Apple Daily, Stand News and Citizen News shuttered under authorities’ pressure.

Hong Kong has ranked higher in subsequent years, though RSF has said this was mostly due to changing situations in other places. The city’s press freedom score has fallen consistently, from 41.64 in 2022 to 39.49 this year.

chart visualization

RSF said in a press release that press freedom was at a “25-year low” across the world, with the average score of all countries and territories hitting a record low.

See also: Explainer: The decline of Hong Kong’s press freedom under the national security law

The US fell seven places, and other countries in the Americas, including Ecuador and Peru, also dropped.

Meanwhile, Norway ranks No. 1 for the 10th straight year, followed by the Netherlands, Estonia, Denmark and Sweden.

In Asia, Taiwan is the highest-ranked place at 28. China placed 178th, just after Iran, with North Korea and Eritrea at the bottom of the list.

‘Systemic collapse’

RSF’s Asia Pacific advocacy manager, Aleksandra Bielakowska, told HKFP on Wednesday that Hong Kong had seen a “systemic collapse” in its press freedoms.

The city ranked 18th in 2002, the first year the index was published, she said.

The Hong Kong press. File photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.
Reporters in Hong Kong. File photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.

“Hong Kong used to be a stronghold of free press, not only regionally but globally,” Bielakowska said.

She said that in recent years, authorities have been pursuing different ways of dissuading the media from independent reporting, including denying visas to journalists or barring them from entering Hong Kong.

Reporters have also reported being followed by unknown individuals. Most recently, in April, media outlet InMedia said its journalists had received harassing text messages “in recent months” and suspected they were being stalked after work.

When the Hong Kong Journalists Association wrote to the Security Bureau about it, the bureau accused the association of making “groundless speculations” that law enforcement was following reporters.

Bielakowska said this was in line with the authorities’ trend of dismissing claims of harassment of reporters as “rumours.” She said there were “strong indications” that authorities were targeting reporters via “centralised operations.”

Declining press freedom

In a press release published on Thursday, RSF referred to the February jailing of pro-democracy media mogul Lai, the founder of now-defunct newspaper Apple Daily.

The watchdog wrote that “a draconian national security law has allowed the authorities to imprison independent publisher Jimmy Lai, who was recently sentenced to 20 years in prison.”

Lai’s sentence is the longest to be meted out under the national security law so far. He was found guilty in December of conspiring to collude with foreign forces and conspiring to publish seditious materials.

Six former Apple Daily employees were also jailed for up to 10 years, with judges saying they played “affirmative and extensive roles.”

Hong Kong media mogul Jimmy Lai. File Photo: Kelly Ho/HKFP.
Hong Kong media mogul Jimmy Lai. File Photo: Kelly Ho/HKFP.

In recent years, there have been reports of journalists being denied visas or entry to Hong Kong. The independent media sector has been targeted by tax audits, while reporters have said they believed they were being followed.

Authorities, however, have maintained that the city continues to enjoy a large degree of press freedom.

After Lai was sentenced, the government said in a statement that it condemned claims that Lai was the victim of “political prosecution.”

“The… 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,” the government said.

  • ✇Hong Kong Free Press HKFP
  • Hongkongers now face fines, jail time if caught carrying vapes in public Tom Grundy
    Hongkongers caught carrying more than five vape pods or 100 heat sticks in public will face up to six months behind bars and a HK$50,000 fine from Thursday. Cases involving smaller quantities will attract fines of HK$3,000. A man smoking an electronic cigarette in Hong Kong. File photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP. The rules cover alternative tobacco products such as vapes, herbal cigarettes and electronic smoking products. They are part of a government effort to tighten controls on smoking, and
     

Hongkongers now face fines, jail time if caught carrying vapes in public

29 April 2026 at 23:40
vaping ban

Hongkongers caught carrying more than five vape pods or 100 heat sticks in public will face up to six months behind bars and a HK$50,000 fine from Thursday.

Cases involving smaller quantities will attract fines of HK$3,000.

A man smoking an electronic cigarette in Hong Kong. File photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.
A man smoking an electronic cigarette in Hong Kong. File photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.

The rules cover alternative tobacco products such as vapes, herbal cigarettes and electronic smoking products.

They are part of a government effort to tighten controls on smoking, and apply regardless of whether a person is consuming the products.

“No person may import, promote, manufacture, sell, or possess for commercial purposes alternative smoking products, including electronic smoking products, heated tobacco products and herbal cigarettes. Starting 30 April 2026, no person may possess a specified alternative smoking product in a public place,” the Department of Health’s Tobacco and Alcohol Control Office says.

The import, manufacture, sale, distribution and promotion of alternative smoking products was banned in April 2022, meaning there is no legal means to acquire them.

OffencePenalty
ImportSummary conviction to a fine of HK$500,000 and imprisonment for 2 years, or on conviction on indictment to a fine of HK$2,000,000 and imprisonment for 7 years
Manufacture, sale, possession for commercial purposes, or giving to another person for promotionSummary conviction to a fine of HK$50,000 and imprisonment for 6 months
Giving an alternative smoking product to any person under the age of 18Summary conviction to a fine of HK$50,000 and to imprisonment for 6 months
Broadcast of advertisementSummary conviction to a fine of HK$50,000 and, in the case of a continuing offence, to a further penalty of HK$1,500 for each day during which the offence continues
Possession of specified alternative smoking product in a public place (Commencing on 30 April 2026)HK$3,000 fixed penalty for cases involving small quantities (Not more than 5 units of capsules/5mL of substance or 100 units of heat sticks or 100 rolls of herbal cigarettes) for non-commercial purposes Summary conviction to a fine of HK$10,000.

Possessing more than the aforementioned quantities of specified alternative smoking products constitutes an aggravating factor and will be handled through prosecution rather than a fixed penalty. Summary conviction to a fine of $50,000 and to imprisonment for 6 months.
Use in non-smoking areaFixed penalty of HK$3,000.
Possession of Part 1 poisonsSummary conviction to a fine of HK$100,000 and to imprisonment for 2 years

Obstructing the police enforcement of the new legislation, or failing to show an ID card, can lead to a fine of HK$10,000.

Not applicable to private property

The ban does not cover private premises such as homes at this stage, said Grace Wong, senior medical and health officer at the Department of Health, as reported by TVB.

From December 1 next year, cigarette packaging will be standardised with brands and product names minimised to thwart the promotional effect.

According to the Department of Health, 9.5 per cent of Hongkongers smoked in 2023 – a reduction from 23.3 per cent in 1982.

Received — 29 April 2026 Hong Kong Free Press HKFP
  • ✇Hong Kong Free Press HKFP
  • Diesel, LPG subsidies for Hong Kong public, commercial vehicles amid fuel price hikes Irene Chan
    The Hong Kong government has announced it will provide diesel and liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) subsidies for public and commercial vehicles, amid higher fuel prices due to the ongoing Middle East war. The diesel subsidy of HK$3 per litre will run for two months, from 12am on Thursday to 11.59pm on June 29, finance chief Paul Chan told reporters on Wednesday. A petrol station in Hong Kong. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP. He said the subsidy, which will benefit public and commercial vehicles, as
     

Diesel, LPG subsidies for Hong Kong public, commercial vehicles amid fuel price hikes

29 April 2026 at 11:54
fuel gov't subsidy

The Hong Kong government has announced it will provide diesel and liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) subsidies for public and commercial vehicles, amid higher fuel prices due to the ongoing Middle East war.

The diesel subsidy of HK$3 per litre will run for two months, from 12am on Thursday to 11.59pm on June 29, finance chief Paul Chan told reporters on Wednesday.

A petrol station in Hong Kong. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.
A petrol station in Hong Kong. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.

He said the subsidy, which will benefit public and commercial vehicles, as well as vessels that use diesel fuel, would be reflected in the listed price at petrol stations, and the government would reimburse the price difference to oil companies or distributors.

The government proposed the diesel subsidy scheme earlier in April, with an estimated expenditure of HK$1.8 billion, and the proposal was “swiftly approved” by the legislature, Chan said.

The finance minister also said the LPG subsidy of HK$0.5 per litre for taxis, minibuses and school buses would run for two months. The measure will benefit around 16,900 taxis, 3,440 minibuses and 170 school buses in the city.

Authorities plan to roll out the LPG subsidy in late May, he said, without saying exactly when.

See also: Hong Kong to see ‘shocks, volatility’ in oil supply amid Middle East war, leader John Lee says

Chan said that due to the ongoing Middle East conflict, the cap price for LPG at dedicated filling stations would rise by over HK$1 per litre – an increase of more than 28 per cent.

“Given that the majority of minibuses and taxis run on LPG, this will place significant pressure on their operations,” he said in Cantonese.

Transport minister Mabel Chan said at the Legislative Council on Wednesday that the LPG subsidy would cost the government around HK$38.4 million.

Petrol stations in Hong Kong. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.
Petrol stations in Hong Kong. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.

She said the expenses would be “reallocated internally” through three bureaus: the Financial Services and the Treasury Bureau, the Environment and Ecology Bureau, and the Transport and Logistics Bureau.

Tse Chin-wan, the environment and ecology minister, told the media at the legislature on Wednesday that the government would sign contracts with oil companies and conduct audits to prevent abuse of the subsidies.

  • ✇Hong Kong Free Press HKFP
  • China to ban drone sales in capital over security fears AFP
    China will ban the sale of drones in Beijing and require users to apply for permission for all flights in the capital under strict regulations that enter force on Friday. Drones. Photo: Pixabay/Pexels.com. Officials have cited public security for the new rules, which also forbid bringing unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) or their core components into Beijing. E-commerce platforms will be banned from shipping UAVs to Beijing, though drone owners who have completed real-name registration o
     

China to ban drone sales in capital over security fears

By: AFP
29 April 2026 at 11:29
Drones Beijing

China will ban the sale of drones in Beijing and require users to apply for permission for all flights in the capital under strict regulations that enter force on Friday.

pexels-photo-207586.jpeg
Drones. Photo: Pixabay/Pexels.com.

Officials have cited public security for the new rules, which also forbid bringing unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) or their core components into Beijing.

E-commerce platforms will be banned from shipping UAVs to Beijing, though drone owners who have completed real-name registration of their gadgets before May 1 will be allowed to take them in and out of the capital.

Drone users in the city of 22 million will have three months after the new rules kick in to register their devices with local police stations.

Several sellers across the city had already removed drones from displays ahead of the rules change, AFP saw Tuesday. An employee at a DJI outlet in central Beijing said the gadgets were being boxed up for transport to other cities.

DJI, which is the world’s largest drone maker and has been sanctioned by the US government over security concerns, is dominant in the Chinese market but now faces being locked out of its home capital by the new rules.

DJI
A DJI kiosk in China. Photo: Wpcpey, via Wikicommons.

The city’s airspace will be closed to all drone flights without prior approval from authorities, with fines of up to 10,000 yuan ($1,463) for illegal flights and possible confiscation of the drone.

Organisations or individuals caught selling drones or 17 core components will also face fines under the new rules.

‘One-size-fits-all’

Drone storage rules will also be tightened in the capital, with individuals allowed to keep at most three drones at a single location within Beijing’s sixth ring road.

Online, many users complained that the new rules were onerous and left them with few opportunities to fly their gadgets in Beijing.

“This is a crazy one-size-fits-all system,” one user wrote on the social media platform WeChat.

Others said they would sell their drones ahead of the new rules.

Beijing
Beijing. File photo: Pixabay.

At one drone-flying school in central Beijing, staff told AFP they were worried about how they would acquire new drones or components when their stock breaks or needs maintenance.

But they hoped that educational and sports facilities like theirs would eventually receive some exemption from the rules.

The new regulations hold that exemptions may be provided for special purposes like counter-terrorism, agriculture, education and sport.

“As the capital, Beijing faces more challenges in low-altitude airspace safety, making it more urgent to strengthen the management of UAVs,” Beijing municipal official Xiong Jinghua said when the rules were announced in March.

National laws have also been tightened this year in China, with illegal drone flights now punishable by up to 15 days detention and UAVs required to provide real-time data to authorities during flights.

Hong Kong Disneyland records 36% drop in profit despite higher hotel occupancy, guest spending

29 April 2026 at 11:15
Disneyland 2025

Hong Kong Disneyland Resort has recorded a 36 per cent drop in net profit in its latest fiscal year, although other figures, including hotel occupancy rate and guests’ per capita spending, trended upwards.

Michael Moriarty Hong Kong Disneyland tourists visitors crowd
Hong Kong Disneyland on May 15, 2023. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.

The theme park announced its results for its 2024-25 fiscal year, ending in September 2025, on Monday.

Amid rising costs, Disneyland saw a net profit of HK$536 million, down from HK$838 million in the 2023-24 fiscal year.

The park’s attendance was also down, from around 7.7 million to 7.5 million, while the hotel occupancy rate improved.

The resort has three hotels – Hong Kong Disneyland Hotel, Disney’s Hollywood Hotel and Disney Explorers Lodge. The overall occupancy rate rose from 73 per cent during the last fiscal year to 80 per cent, the park said.

Per capita spending also increased by 2 per cent, the statement said.

Michael Moriarty Hong Kong Disneyland tourists visitors crowd
Hong Kong Disneyland on May 15, 2023. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.

“Our steady performance is a testament to the resort’s resilience and timeless appeal,” Tim Sypko, managing director of Hong Kong Disneyland Resort, said in a press release on Monday.

The park is set to expand with the addition of new Pixar- and Marvel-themed experiences. The new Pixar attractions will coincide with the animation studio’s 40th anniversary and the upcoming release of Toy Story 5.

Opened in September 2005, Hong Kong Disneyland Resort had struggled to turn a profit for nearly a decade before turning the ship around in the 2023-24 fiscal year.

Before that, it had suffered nine consecutive years of losses. The park had three years of steep losses of over HK$2 billion from the 2019-20 fiscal year to the 2021-22 fiscal year amid the 2019 protests and unrest, followed by the Covid-19 pandemic.

The park relies heavily on tourists. For the 2024-25 fiscal year, 64 per cent of visitors were inbound guests, while the remaining were local.

Hong Kong Disneyland Resort is currently celebrating its 20th anniversary, with festivities to continue until early June.

  • ✇Hong Kong Free Press HKFP
  • Domestic worker arrested for allegedly putting 2 toddlers in dog cage James Lee
    A domestic worker has been arrested on suspicion of child abuse after allegedly putting her employer’s two toddlers in a dog cage on two occasions. Hong Kong police emblem. Photo: Candice Chau/HKFP. Police said they received a report on Tuesday from the children’s mother, who alleged that the Indonesian domestic worker had put the two boys, aged two and three years, in a dog cage on two separate occasions in February. The mother said she saw the incident on surveillance footage broadca
     

Domestic worker arrested for allegedly putting 2 toddlers in dog cage

29 April 2026 at 10:29
Domestic worker arrested for allegedly putting toddlers in dog kennel

A domestic worker has been arrested on suspicion of child abuse after allegedly putting her employer’s two toddlers in a dog cage on two occasions.

Hong Kong Police
Hong Kong police emblem. Photo: Candice Chau/HKFP.

Police said they received a report on Tuesday from the children’s mother, who alleged that the Indonesian domestic worker had put the two boys, aged two and three years, in a dog cage on two separate occasions in February.

The mother said she saw the incident on surveillance footage broadcast to her mobile phone.

The 32-year-old domestic worker was arrested at a residential estate in Tsing Yi on Tuesday on suspicion of ill-treatment or neglect by those in charge of a child or young person.

The mother also reported the case to the worker’s employment agency before deciding to file a police report.

The case has been passed to the Kwai Tsing police crime unit for further investigation.

The two toddlers did not have any visible injuries and had been discharged from hospital after treatment, according to local media reports.

The mother – a single parent who has three boys and a dog – began hiring the domestic worker in mid-2023, local media reported, citing unnamed sources.

Call for regulation

In a statement emailed to the media on Wednesday, lawmaker Elaine Chik expressed concern about the case and called for strengthened early warning and prevention measures to combat child abuse.

She urged employers to prioritise hiring domestic workers with first aid training, nursing, or child psychology backgrounds, adding that hiring agencies should advise workers on managing stress when caring for infants.

Chik, a member of the Democratic Alliance for the Betterment and Progress of Hong Kong (DAB), also called on authorities to implement mandatory training on Hong Kong child protection laws and to look into establishing a regulatory authority to oversee standards for domestic workers.

The lawmaker also said she would bring up the incident at the Legislative Council and ask the government to provide follow-up measures for child abuse cases.

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