Officer hired private vehicle through online platform for HK$780 trip from Kowloon to Hong Kong International Airport, but according to source company was not Uber.
New Labour Department code of practice means employers will have to set up video cameras at ways in and out of confined spaces to ensure safety of workers.
Top Catholic leader Stephen Chow Sau-yan’s comments come in wake of first arrests made by Hong Kong police under local national security law.
Suspect accused of supporting fugitive Nathan Law with money and other individuals through online subscription platform.
Investigation finds syndicate imported women from mainland China as sex workers to offer services in subdivided flats.
From Hong Kong’s landmark national security trial to a German Keanu Reeves lookalike trending in Thailand, here are a few highlights from SCMP’s recent reporting.
Ordinary residents with no intention of breaking law are unlikely to be troubled by the implications of court’s ruling, scholar says.
Lawrence Lau and Lee Yue-shun freed on bail after court says it cannot ascertain their intention in regards to plot to ‘veto’ budget and paralyse government.
Most of 47 have been remanded in custody since they were arrested on January 6, 2021, on subversion charges over unofficial legislative ‘primary’ election.
Hong Kong national security judges convicted 14 of 16 opposition figures contesting subversion charges.
Three High Court judges find unofficial ‘primary’ election part of a wider plot to ‘undermine, destroy or overthrow’ government by creating constitutional crisis.
Lau Kwok-kei, Zafar Tai and two teenagers admitted abducting victim in broad daylight outside Stanley Prison on December 17, 2022.
Employee received WhatsApp message on May 20 from scammer impersonating firm’s chief financial officer, who requested video call with her, insider reveals.
Legal scholar Albert Chen says residents who engage in speech or publication have to judge for themselves whether it is considered seditious under new ordinance.
Judges find 14 of 16 accused guilty over roles in unofficial Legco ‘primary’ that was part of plot to ‘undermine, destroy or overthrow’ government.
Man, 37, apprehended while collecting HK$50,000 from 72-year-old woman in Kwun Tong.
Group is among 47 people prosecuted for what Beijing calls a ‘blatant challenge’ to the law after estimated 610,000 voted in July 2020 to pick candidates for Legco election.
Woman is wife of Kwan Chun-pong, who was among six other suspects arrested by officers from police’s National Security Department on Tuesday, source says.
Suspects are from three teams and are accused of manipulating results of matches after illegal bets were placed on outcome.
Police say fake customer services staff frauds an ‘increasing trend’, with HK$4.16 million the biggest single loss logged.
Chow arrested alongside five others on allegations of ‘repeatedly publishing posts with seditious intentions’ by ‘exploiting upcoming sensitive date’.