Rabu, 29 Juli 2020

China's polarising new security law: Sunset for Hong Kong, or a return to stability? - CNA

HONG KONG: It is known as one of Asia’s most vibrant financial centres — a base for more than 70 of the world’s 100 largest banks and the regional headquarters of over 30 multinational banks.

Hong Kong’s freewheeling economy and open capital flows, backed by an independent judiciary and rule of law, have been its strengths.

It also serves as a gateway to mainland China for international companies reaching out to a consumer market of more than 1.4 billion people.

But Hong Kong’s position as a leading financial hub is said to be under threat following the introduction of China’s new national security law, which took effect on Jun 30.

Beijing imposed the national security law on Hong Kong after months of pro-democracy protests.
Beijing imposed the national security law on Hong Kong after months of pro-democracy protests last year. (Photo: AFP/Anthony Wallace)

Already, United States President Donald Trump has signed an executive order revoking the city’s trade privileges with the US, which have generated an estimated US$38 billion in annual trade between the two sides.

He also signed a law authorising sanctions on Chinese officials and organisations — including banks — that are found to have undermined Hong Kong’s autonomous status.

Businessmen like Mr Conrad Ho believe that such actions, if the US pursues its latest course of action aggressively, will have more ramifications for Hong Kong.

“Even if nothing comes of it, foreign capital could become much warier about investing in Hong Kong,” says the founder and executive director of Coho Group, which manages a portfolio of finance, technology and retail assets.

Watch: The impact of Hong Kong's new security law (49:52)

He knows there is a risk that Hong Kong will lose its competitive edge over other Asian cities like Singapore.

“One financial firm that my company works with is being forced to move to Singapore because their investors find Hong Kong to be too risky and unsafe,” he cites. “Previously, global investors perceived Hong Kong as being independent.”

But he supports the new national security law because “it’ll create more stability” in a city rocked by months of protests. A politically stable Hong Kong, he believes, will be good for business and the economy.

“That’s something Hong Kong needs right now,” he says.

Police clash with protesters in Hong Kong the day after the new security law went into effect.
Police clash with protesters in Hong Kong the day after the new law went into effect. (Photo: The New York Times/Lam Yik Fei)

It is a new reality for Hongkongers, now that Beijing has given itself powers to override the semi-autonomous region’s local laws and crack down on various political crimes, including acts of secession, subversion, terrorism and collusion with foreign forces.

But will it be a return to stability and continued faith in Hong Kong, or will the threat to its autonomous status contribute to its decline? The programme Insight examines what the future holds for the city. (Watch the episode here.)

READ: What lies ahead for Hong Kong, a city on edge

WHITHER JUDICIAL INDEPENDENCE?

A key point of contention is the impact the security law might have on judicial independence and rule of law, as the Chinese parliament’s top decision-making body has the final say in interpreting the law.

The National People’s Congress Standing Committee is not familiar with Hong Kong common law and is likely to “import some of the mainland concepts”, believes University of Hong Kong chair of public law Johannes Chan.

Chinese President Xi Jinping on a video screen in Hong Kong during a live broadcast of the NPC.
Chinese President Xi Jinping is shown on a video screen (top centre) in Hong Kong on May 28, during a live broadcast of the National People’s Congress in Beijing. (Photo: AFP/Anthony Wallace) 

“What they don’t realise is that the economic success of Hong Kong depends on a whole range of things, and among them, no less important is the judicial (and) legal system,” says the professor.

“Once you ... undermine the legal system, you’ll inevitably affect the economic system and Hong Kong. By then, if the legal system is ... no longer effective, there’d be very little difference between Hong Kong and Shenzhen or Hong Kong and Shanghai.”

Despite these concerns over judicial impartiality, some observers believe the level of trust within the business community remains high. It will not “instantly evaporate”, says Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy visiting senior research fellow Drew Thompson.

“Plenty of international businesses have trust in China. And they have major investments in relationships with the government and business entities on the mainland, as well as in Hong Kong,” he adds.

“That said, all international businesses potentially fall under the national security law simply because they’re foreign. So the risks of doing business in Hong Kong have definitely increased. International businesses ... can’t count on Hong Kong’s legal system to be independent.

The potential for returns is still there, so I don’t think Hong Kong is going to become a pariah in that sense. But it’s definitely going to give international companies pause.

Companies and financial institutions have voiced support for the security law, notably British banking giants HSBC and Standard Chartered, two of the biggest banks in Hong Kong.

London-based HSBC bank has come under fire in Britain for backing China's new security law.
London-based HSBC bank has come under fire in Britain for backing the security law imposed on Hong Kong, one of its biggest markets. (Photo: AFP/Anthony Wallace)

HSBC, however, did so only after Hong Kong’s former leader, Leung Chun-ying, blasted the lender — which generates most of its profit in Hong Kong and Asia — for not taking a “stance” after the United Kingdom criticised the law.

Most businesses need not worry unless they are providing funding for subversives, believes Hong Kong Federation of Trade Unions president Stanley Ng.

“Those acting in the name of ‘business’ whilst advocating Hong Kong’s independence or unrest or terrorism ... will definitely be sanctioned. So they must immediately move their assets and register (their business) elsewhere,” he says.

“That’s totally understandable, though other businesses ... shouldn’t be affected.”

HOW MUCH LEVERAGE DOES THE U.S. HAVE?

Hong Kong’s current chief executive, Mrs Carrie Lam, has also given assurances that judicial independence will not be compromised. But the implementation of the new law continues to draw international criticism, including from the Trump administration.

Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam says the security law won't compromise judicial independence.
Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam.

Disastrous as the US’ tough line on China may seem for Hong Kong’s economy, however, some observers believe it lacks substance and teeth.

“You’re going to see a lot of this rhetoric going back and forth, and because of the coming election ... China-bashing, perhaps, will win some of the votes,” says Mr Bernard Charnwut Chan, the Non-official Convenor of the Executive Council.

“But do they really want to go against China? I don’t think so because Trump cares about the economy. Without China as a potential buyer (for) agricultural products and other things ... would that help the US?

“I just can’t imagine that the US will want to go and censure Hong Kong, because it’ll not only hurt us, but equally it’ll hurt them.”

The timing is key, agrees Assistant Professor Eric Lau from The Open University of Hong Kong’s Lee Shau Kee School of Business and Administration. “Trump wants to be re-elected, so he wants to make more news to benefit his election.”

Hong Kong imports more goods from the US than vice versa. The US’ trade surplus last year was US$26 billion (S$36 billion), so “if a trade war starts, the loser would be the US”, he points out.

Professor Jean-Pierre Cabestan from Hong Kong Baptist University’s Department of Government and International Studies has a “hunch” that any US sanctions would be “symbolic”.

“I don’t think it’s in the US’ interest to destabilise Hong Kong as a financial hub (and) penalise American companies or fund companies present in Hong Kong,” he says.

Still, sanctions could have an impact, warns Mr Thompson, such as on “the ability to do financial transactions with named individuals” or on their ability to obtain visas and travel to the US. “It might make them pariahs,” he says.

“When an individual, entity or company has been named to the Entity List, very frequently other countries’ banks won’t want to do business with that person because of the risk they potentially face.

“But at this point, it’s too soon to tell how aggressively (sanctions) will be enforced.”

CONCERN OVER AN EXODUS

Even as China’s new law may potentially have a chilling effect on business, it has cast a pall over the city’s residents. Anxiety and defiance, with protesters taking to the streets, have become the norm.

Beijing has established an office in Hong Kong to enforce the law, but its terms are “vague”, says Prof Chan.

“We don’t know ... what its powers will be, but it’s a fairly scary idea to have a national security unit that’s almost a parallel police force.”

Uncertainty about the city’s future has sparked concern about a new wave of emigration — more than 20 years after the exodus that took place during the 1997 handover of the city from British to Chinese rule.

So far, the UK has offered a path to citizenship for nearly three million Hong Kong residents. Australia and Taiwan have also opened the door to residency in the event of an exodus.

Already, some 50,000 people emigrated from the city of 7.5 million people in the second half of last year. “Many people who can afford to leave are thinking now of leaving, making plans,” says Democratic Party founder Martin Lee.

“Some of the people living here (have) already got passports from Canada, Australia, and they could just pull out quickly, easily. And I’m afraid a lot of tycoons will go.”

An exodus could erode a skilled core of professionals and managers in the society. “In terms of the talent pool, historically, Hong Kong has enjoyed having skilled talent from both the West and from mainland China,” notes Mr Ho.

“Due to all the recent troubles, I’m quite worried that the talent pool we’ve accumulated ... may be lost.”

The local government, however, is not worried about the problem of emigration. “This is nothing new for Hong Kong,” says Mr Chan, who was Mrs Lam's campaign manager when she ran for office.

“We’ve gone through crises in the 60s, in the 80s ... even in the 90s. So we’ve had that so-called brain drain many times ... If you look back, after each crisis, you see a new rise for Hong Kong.

“We saw people leaving, but we also saw people coming in ... So I’m quite confident that Hong Kong will survive. People will always find opportunities to come back.”

ABSENT A COMPROMISE, A LOT TO LOSE

With Hong Kong being brought closer into China’s fold, however, many Hongkongers worry that their city will eventually lose the characteristics — like free speech, judicial independence and rule of law — that have made it what it is today.

Its uniqueness and economic importance have also begun to wane following the rise of Chinese megacities like Beijing, Chongqing, Guangzhou, Shanghai and Shenzhen. Other than Chongqing, they each boast an economy bigger than Hong Kong’s now.

So is Hong Kong at risk of losing its identity and becoming just another Chinese city?

“As Hong Kong’s autonomy erodes, so does its uniqueness as well as its values in the eyes of many people, particularly in international businesses. That autonomy, though, was seen as a threat by Beijing,” said Mr Thompson.

“I don't think that Hong Kong will ever be just another city, but certainly its uniqueness, its vibrancy and its overall importance vis-a-vis the rest of China has diminished considerably.”

Despite this gradual convergence of Hong Kong and the mainland, Mr Chan does not doubt that Beijing “continues to believe in Hong Kong ... (and) ‘one country, two systems’”.

“That’s the key, because they’ll do everything to make sure it works. So I can’t imagine why China would want to hurt Hong Kong, provided that you don't try to hurt them,” he says.

That sentiment is shared by Jessica, who supports the security law. Using a pseudonym for fear of suffering retaliation, she says the violent protests are affecting livelihoods and must stop. Stability, she feels, is key to Hong Kong’s economic future.

“How can we strip away the rights of business owners who want to still operate their businesses?” the 29-year-old questions. “They’re unable to bring home resources to provide for their family.”

Mr Chan thinks Hong Kong was “too free in the past” and had “gone too far” with allowing people to talk about gaining independence from China in future.

“We do have a young generation — you may call them naive or what — but then, some actually think that Hong Kong can survive on its own, which I think is still ridiculous,” he says.

With the new law, Mr Ho believes the authorities can “more effectively and, possibly, more surgically” stop people “inciting hatred across Hong Kong’s different groups”. He adds: “For that, Hong Kong will be a better place in the long run.”

For now, it remains unclear how the crisis will end. But it looks set to be a battle with little hope for a compromise.

“It’s true that we shouldn’t condone those violent acts, but you have to ask the question — what forced those young people to resort to what they’ve done? There are far more serious and deep-rooted causes,” says Prof Chan.

“If we don’t address those issues, a high-handed, draconian law would never resolve the issues.”

Watch this episode here. The programme Insight airs on Thursdays at 9pm.

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2020-07-29 23:37:30Z
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Singapore battling third wave of imported Covid-19 cases - The Straits Times

Singapore is now seeing a third wave of imported Covid-19 cases, with more than 100 such cases confirmed in the past month.

These make up about 15.5 per cent of the total number of imported cases here since the start of the outbreak in January.

As of Tuesday, a total of 688 imported cases of Covid-19 had been confirmed in Singapore.

The number of daily imported cases had earlier dropped to zero as travel restrictions tightened here and around the world.

But on June 15, the multi-ministry task force tackling Covid-19 here announced that more long-term pass holders would be able to return to Singapore during phase two of the country's reopening, which began on June 19.

On June 30, the Republic saw its first imported case in more than two weeks.

Another 106 cases followed up until Tuesday, and they were imported from nine different countries, with more than half - 62 cases - coming from India.

India has seen a rapid rise in Covid-19 infections, with more than 1.5 million confirmed cases, and nearly 35,000 fatalities.

Another 23 cases were imported from the Philippines, which also saw a recent coronavirus surge, while the rest came from countries such as Indonesia, Pakistan and the United States.

Most of the imported cases - 27 - are work pass holders, while 23 of them are Singaporeans.

There were 20 permanent residents and 19 dependant's pass holders among the imported cases.

The increase in cases has prompted some Straits Times readers to ask why travellers entering Singapore are not tested for Covid-19 upon arrival.

Currently, travellers have to get approval before entering Singapore, serve a 14-day stay-home notice (SHN) upon arrival, and are swabbed for the coronavirus a few days before their SHN period ends.

QUARANTINE IMPORTANT

The lesson we learnt from that second wave was that it is vital to ensure that infected cases are quarantined in a way that minimises the risk of spillover. As long as we continue to keep new arrivals separated from the community, then it's not a concern.

ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR ALEX COOK, noting that Singapore had two waves of imported cases before the current one, and that quarantine is an effective measure.

They should travel from their place of residence to the designated testing facility, and return immediately after the test, using a private vehicle. They are also advised to avoid taking public transport.

Some experts had earlier said people who are infected may not test positive during the early stages of their illness due to a low viral load.

Associate Professor Alex Cook, vice-dean of research at the National University of Singapore's Saw Swee Hock School of Public Health, suggested yesterday that countries such as Singapore may consider swabbing travellers on arrival instead of quarantining them.

He told The Straits Times: "This would still help filter out the majority of infected travellers, save money and inconvenience related to quarantine, and could potentially lower the risk of spread to the general population, since those testing positive could then be isolated at hospital or a facility."

However, he added that quarantine is an effective way of combating the spread caused by imported cases. He noted that Singapore went through two waves of imported cases before the current one - an initial wave of cases from Wuhan, and a larger one in March from areas like Europe and countries like the US that preceded a wave of community cases which led to the circuit breaker.

"The lesson we learnt from that second wave was that it is vital to ensure that infected cases are quarantined in a way that minimises the risk of spillover. As long as we continue to keep new arrivals separated from the community, then it's not a concern," he said, adding that any home-based quarantine regime would need to be rigorously enforced.

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2020-07-29 21:00:00Z
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Malaysia MPs caught in crowd at Najib Razak's 1MDB trial, allowed to attend parliament if no COVID-19 symptoms - CNA

KUALA LUMPUR: Members of parliament (MPs) who were among the crowd at the Kuala Lumpur Court Complex on Tuesday (Jul 28) will not be barred from attending parliament sittings if they do not show COVID-19 symptoms.

"We also do not know whether there were COVID-19 positive people (present at the court compound) who have infected MPs who were together with them yesterday.

"I think as long as it is not proven they (MPs) are COVID-19 positive, we cannot stop them from entering the House,” speaker of parliament Azhar Azizan Harun said on Wednesday.

Scores of supporters had gathered at the court compound on Tuesday morning in solidarity with former prime minister Najib Razak, who was later sentenced to 12 years’ jail in his first 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB) corruption trial.

READ: Former Malaysia PM Najib Razak sentenced to 12 years in jail following guilty verdict in 1MDB trial

Najib Razak 1MDB court crowd
Malaysia's former prime minister Najib Razak speaks to members of the media on Jul 28, 2020. (Photo: AFP/Mohd Rasfan)

Mr Azhar added that it remained important for MPs to abide by the standard operating procedures (SOPs) to prevent the spread of COVID-19, both inside and outside parliament.

When asked if the MPs involved should undergo COVID-19 swab tests, Mr Azhar said it was up to the health ministry to decide.

Footage of the large crowd thronging the court complex on Tuesday was widely shared on social media. Several MPs were seen at the compound, several of whom allegedly did not wear face masks.

READ: 'We believe in our innocence', say Najib and lawyers as they pledge to appeal 1MDB verdict

Najib Razak wearing a face mask
Malaysia's former prime minister Najib Razak leaves the Duta Court complex after he was found guilty in his corruption trial in Kuala Lumpur on Jul 28, 2020. (Photo: AFP/Fazry Ismail)

The police also had to use loudspeakers to remind the crowd to practise social distancing.

Health director-general Noor Hisham Abdullah said he was disappointed at the breach of social distancing guidelines at the court compound.

He added that the health ministry would monitor the emergence of positive cases among the supporters within the next two weeks.

READ: Commentary: This is not the end of Najib Razak

A supporter of Najib Razak
A supporter of Malaysia's former prime minister Najib Razak cries after he was found guilty in his corruption trial in Kuala Lumpur on Jul 28, 2020. (Photo: AFP/Mohd Rasfan)

Dr Noor Hisham said the Malaysian government would have no choice but to enforce the movement control order again if local transmission cases escalate.

“We have been working hard for seven months to prevent the spread, if it happens (third wave) we will have to work hard for another four months and 25,000 health personnel will be recalled to work for 20 hours a day if cases escalate,” he said.

BOOKMARK THIS: Our comprehensive coverage of the coronavirus outbreak and its developments

Download our app or subscribe to our Telegram channel for the latest updates on the coronavirus outbreak: https://cna.asia/telegram

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2020-07-29 12:52:18Z
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Hong Kong faces worst wave of coronavirus, but lockdown not an option due to lack of space - The Straits Times

HONG KONG (BLOOMBERG) - Once a coronavirus success story, Hong Kong is facing its worst outbreak yet, and policy makers are realising how little they can do without making a bad situation worse.

New infections have broken records in nine of the last 20 days. But unlike other global cities, Hong Kong has been reluctant to impose stay-at-home restrictions or close non-essential businesses.

Instead, the rules have got incrementally tighter, changing by the week.

Public gatherings were limited to four people, then two. Dining in eateries was banned for dinner, then lunch. Masks were required on public transport, then all indoor public spaces, now everywhere outdoors as well.

The steady drip of half-measures goes against what the short history of the pandemic has shown to work: broad and stringent lockdowns levied early on the infection curve.

In Australia and other places currently fighting flare-ups, officials have quickly reinstated tight restrictions.

While still modest compared with outbreaks in many global cities, the uptick in Hong Kong is particularly troubling, arriving after months with near-zero community transmission and from as yet untraceable origins - exactly the circumstances in which the tightest restrictions are thought to be the most effective.

On Wednesday (July 29), the city reported 113 new local cases, taking the total outbreak to over 3,000.

But going further in Hong Kong could lead to a humanitarian crisis.

"It is extremely difficult to enforce a lockdown in Hong Kong," said Mr Fernando Cheung, a lawmaker with a record of social advocacy.

"There are more than 200,000 people living in subdivided units, some without private toilets and others combining their kitchens, toilets and sleeping places all in one room. To ask people not to step out of that environment for a long period of time is inhumane and impractical," he said.

With the average apartment running around 500 sq ft (46 sq m) - about the size of a New York City studio - it is not just the city's 1.4 million poorest residents living in tiny spaces.

Refrigerators are too small, shelf space too limited to stock up on a week's worth of food at a time. And while ordering groceries online has become standard in other modern cities, it is not common or easy in Hong Kong.

"A full lockdown? Nobody will say that this isn't in the arsenal, but logistically it's a nightmare," Mr Bernard Chan, a top adviser to Chief Executive Carrie Lam, said in an interview. "People still need to go out and buy groceries. And people live in such a tight environment, even going down the lift, you're exposed."

The challenge facing Hong Kong offers more evidence of the disparate impact of the pandemic along existing social and economic fault lines.

From the United States to parts of Europe and South America, the most vulnerable populations are bearing the brunt of the health crisis, made worse by dysfunctional institutions and structures.

Hong Kong's lockdown dilemma has already played out in some developing countries such as India, where the measure caused economic devastation and starvation without slowing down the virus. The country abandoned its lockdown last month and cases have accelerated to nearly 50,000 a day.

Whether or not Hong Kong officials tighten restrictions further, time is running out on the current strategy.

Some 80 per cent of isolation beds and wards in public hospitals are full, and the city's testing capacity is limited. The government is trying to add capacity with private testing labs in Hong Kong and mainland China, and preparing community isolation centres for patients in stable condition.

Meanwhile, the city is already in deep recession, rocked first by months of anti-Beijing protests, then by the pandemic. The economy shrank an unprecedented 9 per cent in the second quarter, the fourth straight quarter of contraction, while the unemployment rate has more than doubled to 6.2 per cent in the past 12 months, reaching a 15-year high.

In its current state of political and economic fragility, Hong Kong cannot impose heavy lockdowns to eliminate all cases the way mainland China does, said Dr Lam Ching Choi, a medical doctor and adviser to Mrs Lam. Instead, the measures have to balance personal and economic needs with public health outcomes, and allow the city to remain an open, international financial centre.

"Our trust level is maybe the lowest compared with Western countries because of the social events that happened this year," Dr Lam said in an interview. "So we must listen to our people and not affect their work, their daily lives - like shopping or visiting their family members."

The poorest in one of the world's most unequal societies are already suffering under the new restrictions, even if they are not officially locked down.

"This is a humanitarian disaster for the poor," said social worker Ng Wai Tung from the Society for Communication Organisation.

Some of the city's poorest families have to share masks because they cannot afford more. Many have lost jobs, said Mr Ng, and homeless people have lost access to public showers.

At 62, Madam Yu Kwan Yee works two cleaning jobs to afford the rent on a subdivided unit in a poor neighbourhood.

"I feel depressed as I have to sit on the bed and face the walls," she said. "When others can have room to hoard food, I need to go to wet markets every day. It's risky - who wouldn't worry?"

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2020-07-29 09:49:04Z
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Hong Kong implements tough coronavirus measures as it warns city on verge of large outbreak - The Straits Times

HONG KONG (REUTERS, AFP) - Hong Kong leader Carrie Lam has warned the city is on the brink of a large-scale outbreak of the coronavirus and urged people to stay indoors as much as possible as strict new measures to curb the disease's spread take effect on Wednesday (July 29).

The new regulations ban gatherings of more than two people, close dining in restaurants and make the wearing of face masks mandatory in public places, including outdoors. Those who breach the rules face fines of up to HK$5,000 (S$890).

These are the toughest measures introduced in the city since the outbreak.

The government has also tightened testing and quarantine arrangements for sea and air crew members, effective on Wednesday.

"We are on the verge of a large-scale community outbreak, which may lead to a collapse of our hospital system and cost lives, especially of the elderly," Mrs Lam said in a statement late on Tuesday (July 28).

"In order to protect our loved ones, our healthcare staff and Hong Kong, I appeal to you to follow strictly the social distancing measures and stay at home as far as possible."

The new measures, which will be in place for at least seven days, were announced on Monday after the global financial hub saw a spike in locally transmitted cases over the past three weeks.

On Tuesday, Hong Kong reported 106 new coronavirus cases, including 98 that were locally transmitted. Since late January, more than 2,880 people have been infected in the former British colony, 23 of whom have died.

During their lunch break on Wednesday, many residents were eating takeaway meals outside in the intense summer heat and humidity.

“It’s so hot outside now,” a construction worker, who gave his surname as Chow, told AFP as he tucked into a pork chop in an alcove outside a department store.  

“Ten minutes after I start work, my shirt is all sweaty,” he said, adding he missed the air conditioning of restaurants.  

Hong Kong has some of the world’s smallest and most expensive apartments. Some residents barely have a kitchen to cook in, making them hugely reliant on cheap eateries.

The finance hub was one of the first places hit by the coronavirus when it emerged from China at the start of the year. It initially had remarkable success in controlling the outbreak – helped in part by a health-conscious public embracing face masks and an efficient track and trace programme, forged in the fires of the deadly Sars virus in 2003.  

By June, local transmission had all but ended.  But the virus later sneaked back into the city and began spreading.  

Health officials have been scrambling to uncover the source of the latest outbreak.  Some have blamed exemptions from the usual 14-day quarantine that the government granted to “essential personnel”, including cross-boundary truckers, air and sea crew and some manufacturing executives.  

The government has since tightened restrictions for some of those groups.  

Gladys Chan, who was taking her lunch break, said she felt the government had not done enough to monitor those with exemptions.  

“I think the government has failed us, especially with this third wave of the pandemic,” she told AFP, adding the latest measures were “too little, too late”.  

As isolation wards fill up, authorities have announced plans to build a temporary 2,000-bed field hospital near the city’s airport, something Chinese authorities have offered to help with.  

The latest lockdown measures are a new body blow for a city that was already mired in recession thanks to the US-China trade war and months of political unrest last year.

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2020-07-29 05:53:33Z
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Ex-Malaysia PM Najib pays S$320000 in bail to remain free pending appeal in 1MDB corruption case - The Straits Times

KUALA LUMPUR (THE STAR/ASIA NEWS NETWORK) - Former prime minister Najib Razak, who has been convicted of seven charges relating to the misappropriation of RM42 million (S$13.6 million) in SRC International funds, on Wednesday (July 29) paid his RM1 million bail.

This is in relation to an order by the High Court that increased Najib's existing bail from RM1 million (S$320,000) by another RM1 million, as a condition for him to be released on bail pending an appeal to the Court of Appeal.

With the latest bail paid, Najib's total amount of bail paid across all his court cases has climbed up to a mammoth RM7 million.

The 67-year-old Pahang MP arrived at the Kuala Lumpur Court Complex around 1pm with his son Norashman, who is one of his two bailors.

Najib was seen leaving the High Court registry and subsequently the court complex around 1.30pm with scores of journalists surrounding him.

As he passed by the media, Najib jokingly said that the photographers had already shot many photos of him on Tuesday (July 28).

Najib was on Tuesday found guilty by the High Court on grounds that his defence had failed to raise reasonable doubt on all the charges levelled against him.

He was sentenced to 12 years in jail and a RM210 million fine in default of five years in jail.

Najib is appealing against the decision.

The increase in bail is one of the two conditions imposed.

The other condition is that Najib must report to the nearest police station twice a month.

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2020-07-29 08:33:59Z
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Anger grows over Hong Kong university sacking of activist for taking part in protests - CNA

HONG KONG: A prominent Hong Kong democracy activist on Wednesday (Jul 29) vowed to appeal his sacking by a top university as city leaders and education chiefs were accused of failing to defend academic freedoms under Beijing's tightening grip.

Law professor Benny Tai, 56, said he was sacked on Tuesday by a disciplinary committee at the University of Hong Kong (HKU) after he was jailed last year for taking part in protests.

In a Facebook post on Wednesday, Tai said he would appeal the university's decision and consider launching a judicial review.

He also made a personal appeal to city leader Carrie Lam.

READ: Hong Kong is on verge of COVID-19 outbreak that could collapse hospital system, says Carrie Lam

"Though I know this is a futile process, Carrie Lam cannot evade ... her responsibility of infringing Hong Kong's academic freedom," Tai wrote.

"There is clear evidence that a power beyond the university has overturned the decision of the university," he said.

Tai, a non-violence advocate, is a leading figure within Hong Kong's movement.

He was jailed last year over his involvement in huge protests in 2014 that brought parts of the city to a standstill for weeks.

State media has previously described him as a "hardcore troublemaker" colluding with foreign forces.

The Liaison Office, which represents Beijing's government in the city, released a statement late on Tuesday calling Tai "evil" and welcoming his removal.

Earlier in the month the same office accused Tai of trying to foment a "revolution".

The sacking has sent a new chill through the city's campuses already rattled by Beijing imposition of a sweeping national security law last month that has begun to criminalise certain political views.

READ: Hong Kongers scrub social media history in face of security law

"Benny Tai has become a martyr to civil disobedience," a political science professor at HKU wrote on his Facebook page.

"The University of Hong Kong has sacrificed its reputation and it will not be able to hold its head high in the international academic community," he added.

"This day will become a major stain in the history of the University of Hong Kong that cannot be washed away."

READ: New Zealand suspends extradition treaty with Hong Kong after China passes national security law

Sophie Richardson, a China expert with Human Rights Watch, said international universities should now reassess their relationship with HKU.

"Calling all unis with ties to HKU and claim to uphold #academicfreedom: Time to speak up about this outrage," she tweeted.

Joshua Wong, a prominent student activist who has also served jail time for leading protests wrote: "#Beijing now extends its reach to academic freedoms in #HK."

HKU has yet to issue a statement outlining why Tai was sacked and how it came to the decision.

Late on Tuesday it released a statement saying it had "resolved a personnel issue concerning a teaching staff member" but it did not name Tai or give any details on what the outcome was citing privacy.

HKU did not respond to media enquiries seeking further information.

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2020-07-29 05:37:23Z
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