
Hong Kong police chief vows tech boost including robot dogs, more drone patrols to tackle crime

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


South China Morning Post
3 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Hong Kong teen dies after being found unconscious in bedroom with ‘space oil' drug
A 17-year-old has died in a Hong Kong hospital after being found unconscious in his bedroom, where police also discovered the narcotic 'space oil', the Post has learned. A police source said on Monday that the teenager's mother had attempted to wake him at their home in Cheung Sha Wan at around 8.45am on Sunday. He was rushed to Caritas Medical Centre in Sham Shui Po, where he was declared dead at 9.49am on Sunday. A police spokesman said officers discovered multiple dangerous substances in the flat, including a vape device containing liquid etomidate, the main ingredient in the drug commonly known as 'space oil'. Cannabis and ketamine were also seized. The source said the 'space oil' was inside the bedroom where the teenager was found. There were no suspicious injuries on his body, but he had multiple self-inflicted wounds on his shoulders and forearms. The teenager did not leave the flat on Saturday. At around 5am the following morning, his father saw him using the bathroom and said he appeared normal. The father also reminded him to take his prescribed psychiatric medication, which he did before returning to his room.


South China Morning Post
3 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Why did Singapore name cyberthreat group UNC3886 and is it linked to China?
Singapore has made a rare move to identify the UNC3886 cyberthreat group that it says is attacking local critical infrastructure. UNC3886 has been identified by Google-owned cybersecurity firm Mandiant as a China-linked cyber espionage group, although Beijing's embassy in Singapore has vehemently rejected the claim. Singapore's Coordinating Minister for National Security K Shanmugam said during a speech at the 10th anniversary of the Cyber Security Agency last Friday that from 2021 to last year, suspected advanced persistent threats against Singapore had increased more than fourfold. These threats often carried out state objectives, the minister noted. Shanmugam, who is also home affairs minister, said one advanced persistent threat group Singapore was facing was UNC3886, which the industry had associated with cyberattacks against critical areas such as defence, telecommunications and technology organisations in the United States and Asia. 'The intent of this threat actor in attacking Singapore is quite clear. They are going after high value, strategic targets. Vital infrastructure that delivers our essential services. If it succeeds, it can conduct espionage, and it can cause major disruption to Singapore and Singaporeans,' he said, without naming the suspected country linked to UNC3886. Less than a day after his speech, the minister posted that lottery numbers for 3886 in Singapore had been sold out. 'I said Singaporeans need to know that UNC3886 is attacking us in cyberspace. And that it's very serious. One reaction: No 3886 has been sold out for 4D today,' he wrote on social media.


South China Morning Post
4 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Hong Kong withdraws tenders for 2 sites to speed up Northern Metropolis development
Hong Kong authorities have withdrawn tenders for two sites in the New Territories initially earmarked for multi-storey buildings for modern industries to speed up development in the Northern Metropolis , with the government taking a bigger role. The Development Bureau said on Monday that a three-hectare site in Yuen Long would be passed to the Hong Kong Science and Technology Parks Corporation (HKSTP) to build a microelectronics ecosystem to promote high-value-added new industrialisation. The corporation runs an innovation park next to the site. An eight-hectare plot in Hung Shui Kiu will be included in a bureau policy study, under which the government aims to establish a company to run an industrial estate in the area. The two sites are among 30,000 hectares of land under the Northern Metropolis megaproject, a blueprint to turn the northern New Territories near the border with mainland China into an economic powerhouse and a housing hub. The bureau said it had halted the tenders to facilitate efficient implementation of more pragmatic arrangements, which could allow them to play a bigger role in promoting industrial development. 'In order to lead and effectively promote the development of industries in the Northern Metropolis, the government has to allow flexibility in the use of [land] and adopt a 'dynamic planning' approach in formulating strategies in accordance with the actual circumstances, thereby accelerating enterprise anchoring and fostering development of the area,' a bureau spokesman said.