The government rejects a proposal to buy back taxi licences for HK$5 million each…
The value of a licence and a taxi has gone from a historic high of HK$7.66 million in 2009 to below HK$3 million in recent months, resulting in significant financial losses for owners.
The licence owners are not, of course, the people who actually drive taxis: they make their effortless income by renting the vehicles out to the old guys trying to make a few hundred bucks per shift. Families that have been sitting on stacks of the permits for decades have – some suspect – notable establishment credentials. Thus, so the theory goes, officials have been reluctant to issue more licences, or to allow Uber to operate legally. But it seems you can only postpone reality for so long. Still, full marks for having the nerve to demand HK$5 million for an artificially scarce piece of paper.
And then it’s back to NatSec…
The Chief Executive defends the inclusion of NatSec conditions for restaurants, funeral homes, etc…
Lee shrugged off worries raised by some businesses in the city that they may run afoul of the law unwittingly.
“Offending conduct means any offence that endangers national security, or acts and events that are contrary to national security and public interest in Hong Kong. It is very clear,” he said in Cantonese.
“Security is the foundation for development, and we will continue to revamp the laws and the mechanisms of safeguarding national security, he added.
Perhaps it is clear: you could lose your restaurant if an off-duty waiter is arrested for – let’s say – playing the wrong computer game.
Yes…
Hong Kong police warn people that downloading a computer game called Reversed Front: Bonfire endangers national security. It has…
…the aim of promoting secessionist agendas such as “Taiwan independence” and “Hong Kong independence”, advocating armed revolution and the overthrow of the fundamental system of the People’s Republic of China established by the Constitution of the People’s Republic of China. It also has an intention to provoke hatred towards the Central Authorities and the Government of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region. Any person or organisation who knowingly publishes the application or related content, including sharing or recommending the application to others via the Internet, may commit the offence of “incitement to secession” under Article 21 and the offence of “incitement to subversion” under Article 23 of the Hong Kong National Security Law, as well as “offences in connection with seditious intention” under Section 24 of the Safeguarding National Security Ordinance.
…those who have downloaded the application may be regarded as in possession of a publication that has a seditious intention. Under Section 24 of the Safeguarding National Security Ordinance, a person who, without reasonable excuse, possesses a publication that has a seditious intention, commits an offence. A person who provides pecuniary or other financial assistance or property to the application developer, including making payment through in-app purchases, with an intent to provide funding to the relevant developer for the commission of secession or subversion, also commits an offence.
You would probably never have heard of it if they hadn’t issued the press release. It seems players ‘choose to pledge allegiance to Taiwan, Hong Kong, Mongolia, Tibet, Kazakhs, Uyghur, Manchuria or the Rebel Alliance of Cathaysian and Southeast Asia’ to ‘overthrow the regime’.
Presumably, if you rewrite the app so you keep the female characters’ huge boobs but give the various territories different names – say Atlantis, Camelot, Avalon, etc – it suddenly ceases to threaten national security.
What if you rejig the game so the locations are parts of the Manchu Empire during the late Qing era?