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Illegal basements are back | Big Lychee, Various Sectors

Illegal basements are back | Big Lychee, Various Sectors
biglychee.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from biglychee.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Go on a geological adventure with Ocean Park

Go on a geological adventure with Ocean Park
ttgasia.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from ttgasia.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Inside Asia s First Beneteau Cup In Hong Kong: The Luxury Sailing Contest

At 11:05, the blast of a horn breaks the silence of the sea. Then comes the sound of agitated instructions flying from the bows to the sterns, and first-time sailing dogs onboard bark with excitement. Our boat has taken the prime starting spot, but another one with a shiny blue hull edges past and overtakes us. To our left is a boat that seems to be struggling just to move. “There’s no wind on the left,” Allen spots this and immediately shouts to the front. “Just go for speed; don’t spin.” Loik Morgant, a seasoned sailor on Freedom, and his shipmate Her keep sprinting back and forth to adjust the ropes and sails, nimbly edging past us.

The Christian Science Monitor Daily for April 19, 2021

Jimmy Lai has worn many hats in Hong Kong. As a preteen, he was a refugee fleeing the Communist mainland. He’s been an odd-job factory worker, a successful businessman, a media mogul, and one of Hong Kong’s loudest voices against encroaching control from Beijing. And now, he’s one of the highest-profile figures arrested under the new national security law – a bellwether for where China’s crackdown, and the pro-democracy movement, go from here. But Mr. Lai himself isn’t going anywhere. A billionaire and British citizen, he could have left Hong Kong for a life in exile, friends and acquaintances say. He stayed. On Friday, he was sentenced to 14 months behind bars for taking part in two protests in 2019, during a mass movement to maintain and expand Hong Kong’s autonomy. The same day, his trial began for alleged violations of the sweeping national security law, which could see him jailed for life. 

He has not bowed : Jimmy Lai and Hong Kong s future

Jimmy Lai has worn many hats in Hong Kong. As a preteen, he was a refugee fleeing the Communist mainland. He’s been an odd-job factory worker, a successful businessman, a media mogul, and one of Hong Kong’s loudest voices against encroaching control from Beijing. And now, he’s one of the highest-profile figures arrested under the new national security law – a bellwether for where China’s crackdown, and the pro-democracy movement, go from here. But Mr. Lai himself isn’t going anywhere. A billionaire and British citizen, he could have left Hong Kong for a life in exile, friends and acquaintances say. He stayed. On Friday, he was sentenced to 14 months behind bars for taking part in two protests in 2019, during a mass movement to maintain and expand Hong Kong’s autonomy. The same day, his trial began for alleged violations of the sweeping national security law, which could see him jailed for life. 

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