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Latest news with #Tin Shui Wai

Hong Kong police arrest 11 domestic helpers in connection with illegal abortion
Hong Kong police arrest 11 domestic helpers in connection with illegal abortion

South China Morning Post

time3 days ago

  • South China Morning Post

Hong Kong police arrest 11 domestic helpers in connection with illegal abortion

Hong Kong police have arrested 11 domestic workers for allegedly selling illegal abortion pills or performing abortions unlawfully after one of the suspects was believed to have killed a fetus older than the legal limit of 24 weeks of pregnancy. While police said on Friday that they believed the helpers were not operating as a crime syndicate, they warned that it was a criminal offence in Hong Kong to administer pharmaceutical drugs to perform abortions illegally. The saga came to light on June 2 when Yuen Long police received a report that a 39-year-old domestic helper had collapsed at her employer's home in Tin Shui Wai, northwestern New Territories. 'Paramedics arrived and discovered the helper had given birth to a fetus, which was later found to be dead,' said Inspector Lam Ho-yin of the Yuen Long police district crime squad. 'The fetus was about 35cm [13.8 inches] long. There was no indication it was a live birth.' Subsequent investigations revealed that the helper, who was later arrested for 'child destruction', had earlier bought medication for an abortion from a friend who was also a domestic worker. On July 6, police arrested the second domestic helper, aged 32, at Hong Kong airport for allegedly selling abortion pills.

Court blocks Hong Kong violin teacher's bid to fight eviction from public flat
Court blocks Hong Kong violin teacher's bid to fight eviction from public flat

South China Morning Post

time5 days ago

  • South China Morning Post

Court blocks Hong Kong violin teacher's bid to fight eviction from public flat

A Hong Kong court has blocked an intended judicial challenge by a public housing tenant against an eviction order after finding it reasonable for authorities to conclude that she was not living in the flat. The High Court on Wednesday handed down a written judgment declining to give permission for violin teacher Tang Wai-yin to lodge a judicial review over the Housing Authority's decision to reclaim possession of her one-person flat in Tin Shui Wai. Authorities have stepped up efforts to tackle suspected abuse of public housing resources after Kwong Kau, the former father-in-law of slain model Abby Choi Tin-fung, was found in 2023 to have owned a luxury home and a subsidised flat. Tang complained that investigators from the Housing Department's public housing resources management subsection had made 18 sudden inspections of her flat at Tin Tsz Estate last year when she had gone out to work or to take care of her family. The case centres on a flat at Tin Tsz Estate in Tin Shui Wai. Photo: Handout In her written case, Tang also sought to justify the flat's low water and electricity consumption by saying she had pursued an eco-friendly lifestyle and chose not to use air conditioning and refrigerators during the summer.

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