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A couple poses for wedding photos in Tsim Sha Tsui. Hong Kong’s Immigration Department has hit back in the wake of the Audit Commission’s latest report regarding enforcement in fake marriages. Photo: Felix Wong
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Indonesia’s self-taught dental workers say they fill a need in society – just not in Hong Kong Muhammad Tohir’s dental shop in central Jakarta, Indonesia. Photo: SCMP/Resty Woro Yuniar
When four Indonesian domestic workers in Hong Kong were arrested last month for breaching the conditions of their stay and offering dental services despite having no training, it caused a stir.
The four had rented a room on their days off to offer treatments such as scaling, trimming, fillings and braces - charging between HK$200 and HK$2,000 - to fellow Indonesians.
In comments to the media, a Hong Kong Immigration Department spokesman said practising dentistry without registration was a threat to health and safety, in a time of Covid-19.
South China Morning Post
When four Indonesian domestic workers in Hong Kong were arrested last month for breaching the conditions of their stay and offering dental services despite having no training, it caused a stir.
The four had rented a room on their days off to offer treatments such as scaling, trimming, fillings and braces - charging between HK$200 (S$34) and HK$2,000 - to fellow Indonesians.
In comments to the media, a Hong Kong Immigration Department spokesman said practising dentistry without registration was a threat to health and safety, in a time of Covid-19. The situation is absolutely unacceptable, the spokesman said.
Campaign to Discredit BBC Revealed as Media Conditions Inside China Continue to Deteriorate
Posted by John Chan | Mar 5, 2021
A newly published report by the Australian Strategic Policy Initiative (ASPI) has documented how Chinese diplomats and other state-affiliated public figures engaged in a coordinated effort to discredit and undermine U.K.’s public broadcaster, the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC). According to the report, the effort came after the BBC published a report alleging systematic rape in Xinjiang’s detention camps, as well as the decision by the U.K.’s media watchdog to revoke the broadcasting license of Chinese state-owned television broadcaster CGTN. ASPI’s Albert Zhang and Jacob Wallis