TODAY IN HIGH COURT: MAN DENIED TO KIDNAP MAINLAND BUSINESSMAN ON PURPOSE

One of the four suspects said ‘it is just a prank’ for detaining a mainland businessman for four days in 2014.

The trial of four men charged with forcible detention of a mainland gambler, continued today at the High Court.
Four men are charged with forcible detention of persons with intent to procure a ransom for their liberation.
The mainland businessman, surnamed Wong, was said to have lost  $4.8 million while gambling in Macau.
 In November 2014, when he and his legal consultant came to Hong Kong to discuss the issue, they were forced the defendant into a car and were sent to a house in Tai Wai where they were watched by four men.
After five days of detention, the two men escaped and shouted for help on the street.
The defendant discovered that and tried to stop them from running away but then the police came and arrested them.
A video recording of police questioning one of the defendants was shown in court  today.
In the recording, the first defendant, Wong Wai-sun, said he and another defendant Lam Chi-chun were asked by a friend to ‘look after’ the two men and he had no idea what happened.
He hit the businessman once when he entered the car and he said it is only because the man injured him first and he had no intention to harm them.
He also mentioned that the two mainlanders did not ask to leave or escape. The six people including the defendants, the businessman and his legal consultant, ‘got along very well in the house’, according to the defendant.
Wong said ‘if he knew this thing is bad, he would not have done so. He also had a wife and a young child to take care of.’
He thought ‘it is just a prank’ and they are just punishing them for not returning the money.
The trail will continue tomorrow.

TRAIN TO THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT

MTR South Island Line may cause more inconvenience than benefit to the community

The Mass Transit Railway Corporation (MTR) has recently announced that due to the construction work in Admiralty station, the South Island Line (East) may launch at early 2017.

The South Island Line (East) will connect the Southern District, including Ocean Park, Wong Chuk Hang, Lei Tung and South Horizons, to the existing Admiralty station.

The Southern District has been suffering from serious traffic congestion for decades since most of the vehicles rely on the Aberdeen Tunnel to get to the heart of Hong Kong Island.

There are traffic jams almost every morning in the Aberdeen tunnel as more than 70 per cent of residences rely on the tunnel to get to other parts of Hong Kong

There are traffic jams almost every morning in the Aberdeen tunnel as more than 70 per cent of residents rely on the tunnel to get to other parts of Hong Kong.

The Transport Department has put forward a proposal to establish several new bus and minibus routes to improve traffic congestion in the Southern district, after consultation and looking at the data from the bus and minibus companies.

Several new routes will be established – for example, minibus 51B that links Tin Wan Estate with the future Wong Chuk Hang MTR station – but other routes will be rerouted or cancelled, like Citybus 71 and 75, which serves Central and Wong Chuk Hang.

Some commuters are skeptical about the ability of the new MTR line in resolving traffic problems. They believe that the plan will bring more inconvenience to the Southern District.

Nine community interest groups – including Western District Transport, SH Concern Group and Imaging Wong Chuk Hang – have set up a Concern Alliance to call for actions to bring residents’ voices to the Transport Department and the Southern District Council.

“I think the Transport Department has underestimated the number of people who travel in and out of the district everyday during peak hours,” Clive Law Siu-yin, a member of the South Island Line Concern Alliance, said.

According to the MTR website, there will be a total of ten trains, each with three carriages, serving the South Island Line (East). Law is concerned that the number of people who will be affected by the cancellation of bus routes in the Southern District is larger than the number of people the MTR line can serve.

It may not be possible to increase the trains’ capacity in the future since the platform’s design can only fit at most 3 train carriages

It may not be possible to increase the trains’ capacity in the future since the platform’s design can only fit at most 3 train carriages.

Changes to bus and minibus routes serving the Southern District will be carried out within three to six months. But the Concern Alliance believes that these changes may not serve the community well.

Charles Lee Chun-sang, another member of the Alliance, said that the Transport Department should survey new travelling habits after the Line opens, before changing bus and minibus services.

The Alliance is also skeptical about the statistics and proposals that the Transport Department is giving to the Southern District Council, as it favours some transportation service providers, such as the Citybus and New World First Bus.

“The bus company conducted the survey when secondary school students were having exams and university students were having a semester break. The number of passengers must be fewer than normal. They didn’t even mention where they conducted the survey. How can these unclear and unrealistic results be a reference used in the council?” Law said.

District Councillor and member of the Traffic and Transport Committee, Henry Chai Man-hon was also skeptical of the statistics and surveys provided by the Transport Department.

Both Chai and the Alliance believe that the Transport Department is not looking for the best travel routes for the district, but instead is helping the bus companies to maximise their profits.

Lee criticised the Citybus for giving up some bus routes in the district. “It is very irresponsible for the bus company to do so,” Lee said.

Some have also suggested that the bus companieswould not stand to benefit from the Transport Department’s plans, since it prioritises the South Island Line. Chai disagrees.

“The bus company has been asking for the cancellation of the routes as it brings very low profit to them,” Chai said..

“Luckily, we successfully stopped the Transport Department from using some of the survey data collected by the bus company,” he said.

Chai criticised the Transport Department for insufficient consultation and research before proposing reforms to the bus routes. “They have only done a consultancy report and collected residents’ opinion through district councillors. They should have done more,” he said.

Chai also thinks that the department is trying to cover up transport  problems by delaying discussion in the District Council.

“It is already very close to the opening date of the South Island Line and the Transport Department has not yet put the proposals into the District Council’s meeting agenda, giving us very little time to discuss and react. It is definitely an executive hegemony,” Chai criticised.

The construction work in Wong Chuk Hang Station of the South Island Line (East) is almost done

The construction work in Wong Chuk Hang Station of the South Island Line (East) is almost done.

In the District Council, Chai hoped the government could give the community a reasonable plan for the transportation system in the Southern District.

While District Councillors are doing their part in the meetings, the Alliance would like to get the community more involved in their actions.

“Although we are concerned that we only have a few helpers, we are going to distribute some leaflets and maybe call for action in the coming weeks, so as to give the community a better transportation system,” Lee said.

(Edited by Jonathan Chan)

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NEW SAFETY RULES FOR MAIDS AFTER SEVERAL DIED WHILE CLEANING WINDOWS

by Isabella Lo, Tiffany Lui & Morris Chan

At least five foreign domestic helpers in Hong Kong fell to their deaths while cleaning windows over the past five years, according to news reports .  Since 2014, there have been a  total of 14 deaths that resulted form people falling out of high-rise windows in the city.

Employer groups have urged the government to improve safety regulations  for domestic workers who may risk their lives cleaning  windows.

After meeting the Phillipines and the Indonesian consulates, Secretary for Labour and Welfare  Matthew Cheung Kin-chung said on Saturday that the government will include new clauses in domestic helpers’ contracts to prohibit the cleaning of exterior windows for households.

The labour chief said that individual circumstances, such as windows located on the ground floor of a house or those with iron grills, should be taken into consideration when revising  existing regulations.

“The department is expected to meet with employers groups in the following week to discuss the details and wordings of the new clause,” he added.

The ban, originally to be commenced on October 15, was suspended for a month until November 14 after the Hong Kong government expressed its concerns to the Philippines consulate.

A Similar ban was launched in Singapore  in June 2012 after accidents caused by window cleaning. Singapore authorities now only allows maids to clean the exterior of windows if an adult employer is present, and if the windows have grills that are locked during the process.

A study by the non-profit Justice Centre, reveals that domestic workers works on average, about 12 hours a day, and nearly 40% did not have their own room.

Hong Kong is home to approximately 34,000 migrant domestic helpers, most of them women from Indonesia and the Philippines.

Under current law, the SAR government requires employers to buy insurance for their foreign domestic workers. The maid’s family members are eligible for compensation, and the cost of transferring the body back to their homeland will also be covered.

domestichelpers