The Hong Kong government inches towards admitting that the ‘green bags’ waste disposal plan is pretty much dead…
The Hong Kong government said its waste-charging scheme had become a “public disturbance” over the course of a two-month trial run.
In a paper submitted to the Legislative Council on Friday, the Environment and Ecology Bureau and the Environmental Protection Department said residents found the waste tax to be a hassle and the designated rubbish bags to be overpriced.
Frontline cleaners reported an “significant increase” in their workloads and raised concerns that they may inadvertently break the law by handling rubbish incorrectly. Some even said they would quit their jobs upon the official launch, the government said.
The Standard quotes sources as saying the scheme is ‘postponed indefinitely’.
The waste-charging plan has been years in the making and in principle makes good sense. But the people responsible for policymaking and implementation have little connection with the lives most people lead. With spacious housing, cars (even chauffeurs), house servants, maybe subsidized overseas schooling for kids, priority access to public hospitals, etc, they probably never take a bag of trash out.
With elected and critical lawmakers now debarred, jailed or in exile, the legislature is mostly composed of appointed loyalists who repeat official talking points and vote for whatever the executive branch wants. Opposition media have been closed. There was no-one to point out possible public opposition.
Transport bureaucrats similarly show little interest in conditions for pedestrians. An illustrated thread from Transit Jam on the last few days’ carnage on one road in Kowloon…
[May 23] Last night, Mong Kok, Alphard driver loses control, shovels the sidewalk, six injured including two passersby. 628 Nathan Road. Driver said a taxi cut him up and he had no choice. The instigating taxi disappeared into the night…
[May 24] It happened again last night … a few hundred metres further south, 380 Nathan Road. BMW driver lost control, smashed onto the pavement at around 3:15am and fled…
[May 25] And AGAIN, this time onto a pedestrian island at the southern end of Nathan Road (Salisbury Road junction/Peninsula). 6:40pm tonight, six injured and taken to Queen Elizabeth Hospital, including one aux policewoman on pedestrian marshall duty.
This island is usually VERY packed with tourists. The crash happened at 6:40pm, just before the drone show.
DRIVERS PLEASE STOP SMASHING INTO PEOPLE ON THE PAVEMENT!
[May 26] This is turning into the thread of death and destruction on Nathan Road.
4am. 27-year-old taxi driver smashed into a motorbike at Nathan/Argyle. 22-year-old rider and his 24-year-old female passenger both killed. Taxi driver and his passenger injured, a 67-yr-old pedestrian also badly injured by collision debris.
[May 26] HOLY FUCK YET ANOTHER NATHAN PED CRASH, AT THE EXACT SAME JUNCTION AS THIS MORNING’S DEADLY CRASH: A pedestrian crushed against a railing by KMB bus. Trapped for 20 minutes, taken to hospital conscious but struggling.
As per HK01 the exact same thing happened here in 2017, a mainland woman lost her foot in that crash: the driver got a suspended sentence.
It’s Sunday today, since Thursday the Nathan Road pedestrian injury tally stands at 12, out of 15 injured (and 2 killed) in total.
Some other things…
HKFP reports the resignation of the local weightlifters’ association after she was criticized for saying ‘countries’ without adding ‘territories’. Who would be involved in sports admin when the government blasts your casual phrasing as…
…“absolutely unacceptable” and “grossly inconsistent with the fact that delegations from Hong Kong, China and Chinese Taipei participated as regional teams.”
An HKFP op-ed asks why suspects in Hong Kong are waiting years for trial…
Trials relating to the storming of the Legislative Council and disorders at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, both in 2019, came up last year. A man charged with posting subversive Facebook messages in 2020 was tried only last week. The famous 47 democrats, after first hearings at which most of them were refused bail in March 2021, are still awaiting a verdict, as are the former editors of Stand News – a case which began with their arrests, also in 2021.
Probably the current record-holder is Benny Tai, who was charged in July 2021 with election offences committed in 2016. But the competition is lively. The latest prosecution arising from the Yuen Long incident was brought only this year. Of the more than 10,000 people arrested at one time or another in 2019, there are still around 8,000 who have not yet appeared in court.
In the SCMP, Regina Ip paints a romantic picture of Hong Kong Economic and Trade Offices overseas, especially the London one’s noble role during colonial times facilitating textiles exports and helping Hongkongers in a quasi-consular capacity. She says that ‘strengthening security protection and monitoring hostile activities targeting Hong Kong’ is justified as the office has been the focus of protests, but largely glosses over the UK’s recent arrests of an office manager and two people apparently hired by him. In an accompanying Tweet, she laments…
It would be a shame to write off [the HKETO’s] contributions, and overplay the “spying” allegations. Collecting “soft intelligence” is a standard part of consulates’ “country” reports, right ?
Maybe, but it looks like the ETO was involved in some sort of surveillance/enforcement operation – completely outside its supposed responsibilities.