The SCMP interviews Hongkongers spending the holiday across the border…
…[Edward Wong said] that Hong Kong eateries, which often required table sharing and imposed dining time limits, were less competitive than their mainland counterparts.
“Restaurants on the mainland are more spacious and offer better service,” he said.
Simon Chiu, a 66-year-old retiree, headed to Shantou in Guangdong with his wife to join a group of friends for a short getaway.
…Chiu said Hong Kong’s dining scene lacked fresh ideas and creativity while the mainland offered better value for money.
“Most importantly, many of our friends have headed north during the holidays, so we would be the only ones staying behind if we remained in the city,” he said.
Maggie Tsang, 42 … set aside around HK$1,000 (US$127.50) for food and children’s game parades, ball pits and family facilities at shopping centres in Futian district.
She said playgrounds and child facilities on the mainland cost about half as much as those in Hong Kong.
“It is also much more affordable as we are travelling with another family, splitting all the bills with us,” Tsang said.
Raymond Yeung, a 48‑year‑old technician … said … Shenzhen offered more options for family activities.
“You have more space in Shenzhen to play, and there’s more greenery too,” he said.
Why is the overcrowded and overpriced side of the border the one trying desperately to boost its tourism industry?
From the Standard – NatSec police arrest Hunter Bookstore owner Leticia Wong and her husband…
…for allegedly distributing seditious materials and utilizing a youth exhibition on student suicides to brainwash children with anti-government hatred, all while facing accusations of laundering massive amounts of overseas funding from anti-China organizations.
[They] … were recently arrested by officers from the Police National Security Department on suspicion of “doing an act or acts with seditious intention.”
Wong is also implicated in an additional money laundering charge for allegedly receiving multiple suspicious payments amounting to hundreds of thousands of dollars from overseas anti-China organizations.
According to informed sources, in addition to selling and displaying publications with seditious intentions, the involved bookstore frequently utilized seminars and sharing sessions targeted at teenagers and students to instill anti-government ideologies.
Recently, the bookstore held an exhibition regarding the “issue of student suicide,” but the exhibits contained a massive amount of content intended to disparage the central and Hong Kong governments, instilling a psychology of hatred in young children.
Human Rights Watch marks six years of NatSec in Hong Kong…
The Chinese Communist Party and state have comprehensively reengineered Hong Kong’s foundation of governance, reshaping its leadership, personnel, institutions, and ideology. The authorities no longer present national security as an exceptional response to the 2019 protests, but as a standing principle of administration. They have enforced citywide compliance by punishing increasingly minor acts and targeting ordinary people for peaceful expressions.
…The government cites national security to justify censoring expression across the arts, film, and publishing. Even restaurant licenses now include national security clauses.
…The draconian national security regime has been used by the government to stamp out dissent and act with impunity, with far‑reaching consequences. The deadly Tai Po fire in November 2025 is an example of this new approach. Despite ample evidence pointing to government negligence, no officials have apologized or shown any indication of accepting accountability. Instead, the authorities silenced critics on social media and arrested a student and a YouTuber for “sedition” after they spoke out. The government also barred victims from displaying banners on their homes and journalists from accompanying survivors as they returned to their apartments to retrieve their belongings.
Benedict Rogers in Union of Catholic Asian News…
Almost three decades on, those promises lie in tatters, those treaty obligations and constitutional protections shredded.
Over the past decade, and particularly the past six years since the National Security Law was imposed, most of Hong Kong’s basic freedoms — of expression, association, and assembly, along with media freedom — have been dismantled, and other freedoms — of religion and academic thought — increasingly undermined.
Hundreds of political prisoners remain in jail, including the media entrepreneur Jimmy Lai, serving a 20-year sentence, barrister Chow Hang-tung, and trade unionist Lee Cheuk-yan. Independent newspapers have been forced to close, civil society has been shut down, pro-democracy political parties have ceased activities, and the legislature has been transformed from a vibrant multi-party quasi-democratic entity to a puppet rubber-stamp body of pro-Beijing goons handpicked by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP)
Hong Kong has been transformed from one of Asia’s freest and most open cities into one of its most repressive police states. The only features that mark it out from mainland China are that it retains its own currency, and the internet is still more freely accessible. The ‘Great Firewall’ of China has not yet engulfed Hong Kong, although what you post or share or even ‘like’ on social media can get you arrested and some websites, such as that of Hong Kong Watch, which I co-founded almost a decade ago, are blocked.













