logo
Top Beijing official Xia Baolong arrives in Hong Kong for 5-day visit

Top Beijing official Xia Baolong arrives in Hong Kong for 5-day visit

A senior Beijing official overseeing Hong Kong affairs has arrived in the city for a five-day visit in which he is expected to meet representatives from the education and business sectors before giving a keynote speech on national security.
Xia Baolong, director of the Hong Kong and Macau Affairs Office, arrived in the city at around 5pm on Wednesday via the Shenzhen Bay border crossing, with sources saying he will attend a dinner hosted by Chief Executive John Lee Ka-chiu in the evening.
Xia's trip, which follows a seven-day inspection visit he made to Hong Kong in February last year, is mostly to attend a key forum on Saturday marking the fifth anniversary of the imposition of the national security law, according to insiders.
A source said the trip would help the central government understand Hong Kong's overall situation and propose an optimal plan for the city's better integration with mainland China's next-stage development. Beijing is finalising its 15th five-year plan for national economic and social development.
In May, President Xi Jinping called for the public's feedback on the nation's 2026-30 national economic development plan, with an emphasis on science and modernisation.
In the past few months, Xi and other top Chinese leaders have been travelling around the country to lay the groundwork for the new blueprint and a coming party plenum. A comprehensive catalogue of quantifiable socio-economic goals will be made public in March.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

China's possible Israel-Iran peace role, robot firms' big salaries: SCMP daily highlights
China's possible Israel-Iran peace role, robot firms' big salaries: SCMP daily highlights

South China Morning Post

time28 minutes ago

  • South China Morning Post

China's possible Israel-Iran peace role, robot firms' big salaries: SCMP daily highlights

Catch up on some of SCMP's biggest China stories of the day. If you would like to see more of our reporting, please consider subscribing China is expected to play an 'active' role in trying to broker a ceasefire between Israel and Iran, but analysts warned there may be limits to what it could achieve. A week after the second round of high-profile trade negotiations between Beijing and Washington, analysts break down what happened before, during and after. The number of Chinese suppliers attending the Paris Air Show has more than doubled for this year's edition. Photo: Xinhua China's presence at the Paris Air Show – the globally renowned civil aviation expo – is usually reduced to Beijing's biggest names in the field. In particular, conversation tends to focus on the Commercial Aircraft Corporation of China (Comac), the maker of the C919 passenger jet. But things have changed this year. Dozens of lesser-known Chinese firms from across the supply chain have flocked to the European capital to showcase their products to Western buyers.

TikTok's fate still in limbo as Trump extends deadline to sell platform's US operations
TikTok's fate still in limbo as Trump extends deadline to sell platform's US operations

South China Morning Post

time43 minutes ago

  • South China Morning Post

TikTok's fate still in limbo as Trump extends deadline to sell platform's US operations

The fate of short video app TikTok in the United States remains in limbo, according to analysts, even as the Trump administration gives owner ByteDance fresh 90-day extension to find a non-Chinese buyer for the popular platform's operations in the country. The White House on Tuesday said US President Donald Trump would sign another executive order this week 'to keep TikTok up and running' in the US. While Beijing and Washington work on a trade deal, 'the TikTok issue is beyond the scope of traditional trade, as it involves national security, data sovereignty, technological competition and other highly sensitive issues', said Sun Chenghao, a fellow and head of the US-EU programme of the Centre for International Security and Strategy at Tsinghua University 'Even if there is some easing in the trade area, the prudent attitude towards the [TikTok] issue has not been loosened', he said. His assessment reflects the uncertainty on whether Trump can – or will – keep extending the ban, as the government continues to try to negotiate a deal for TikTok.

Reaping of the sow: China to reduce pig count by 1 million amid low prices, deflation risk
Reaping of the sow: China to reduce pig count by 1 million amid low prices, deflation risk

South China Morning Post

time43 minutes ago

  • South China Morning Post

Reaping of the sow: China to reduce pig count by 1 million amid low prices, deflation risk

China's national breeding sow inventory will be reduced by 1 million from the current level of 40.38 million to ease an oversupply of pork in the market that has suppressed swine prices and raised deflationary pressures in the economy. While specifics of the reduction were limited, it would take the national sow herd size down to 39.5 million, said in an exclusive report, citing a plan proposed by the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs last week. The ministry was looking to ease industry losses caused by an oversupply of hogs and persistently low pork prices, the website, which is an online tech and financial news platform, reported on Tuesday. In addition to cutting the number of sows, regulators have reportedly introduced stricter rules for pig farms, like prohibiting pigs that have already reached the slaughtering standard from continuing to be fed to increase their weight before being sold – an industry practice blamed for worsening short-term oversupply and further depressing prices. The measures are not only aimed at restoring a healthier supply-demand balance in the pork sector, but also at easing deflationary pressure in the broader economy, since the price of pork is highly weighted in China's consumer price index that tracks the price changes of a basket of goods and services purchased by consumers. 2025 could be another year with persistent deflationary pressures, unless the stimulus is big enough to create another credit upcycle, according to a report by Macquarie last week. China's GDP deflator has fallen for eight quarters in a row, marking the longest deflationary streak in the past four decades, the report said, referring to the measurement of the overall price level for new, domestically produced goods and services – making it a broad measure for inflation.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store