
‘The World is my Oyster'
With a list of accomplishments most people only dream of by age 28, Bangladeshi-Hongkonger Lamia Rahman is a force to be reckoned with. Is her story proof that Hong Kong's diverse ethnic minority communities, with the right support, have reached a point where long-standing barriers are falling and unprecedented opportunities are emerging?
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South China Morning Post
6 hours ago
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Spouses, children of top talent unhappy with life in Hong Kong: university study
Most of the spouses and children of top talent, mainly from mainland China, are struggling to adapt to life in Hong Kong and are feeling unhappy, a university study has found, with researchers calling for better support services from schools and communities. Hang Seng University last week published a cross-subject study that began last December and involved 1,000 people who arrived as dependents of those admitted under the Quality Migrant Admission Scheme, with many coming from across the border. The scheme, which was introduced in 2006, allows successful applicants to relocate to Hong Kong without a prior employment offer. But the recent study found that the dependents of such candidates, in particular children , reported low satisfaction overall with their lives in Hong Kong. According to the research, nearly 70 per cent of spouses and 85 per cent of children reported feeling dissatisfaction, with 30 per cent of youngsters saying they were 'very dissatisfied'. The study also found that education and learning were the areas that dependents attached the most importance to, yet more than 70 per cent of them felt that studying in Hong Kong was not the right choice.


South China Morning Post
7 hours ago
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Chinese dad, 82, harvests plums before sunrise for sending to son; story gets 4 million views
A video clip of an 82-year-old man in China waking up at 3am to pick plums before sending them to his son has gone viral on mainland social media. The video was posted online on July 18 by a man called Cheng. Surveillance camera footage shows Cheng's octogenarian father carrying a big bamboo basket on his back and holding a torch. He is walking towards plum trees planted in front of his courtyard in rural Chongqing in southwestern China, the Chongqing TV reported. It was 3.44am on July 17, according to surveillance camera records. 'I asked my father why he woke up so early to pick plums. He said he had checked with courier workers who told him plums should be picked before the sunrise because the temperature is at a level for them to be conserved well,' Cheng was quoted as saying.


South China Morning Post
17 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
How the humble Good Morning towel became a symbol of hard-working people in Asia
It is early on a Saturday morning and a wet market in Hong Kong's Causeway Bay neighbourhood is heaving with people stocking up on produce before Typhoon Wipha hits later that day. At one stall, a fishmonger fillets a fish on a chopping block. A red bucket hangs on the wall next to him, while styrofoam boxes are scattered throughout the market. Hidden among the stalls is another market 'staple' – the Good Morning towel, a piece of white cotton emblazoned with 'Good Morning' in bright red cursive and its equivalent translation in Chinese (zhu jun zao an). While 'Good Morning' is the most common phrase, others such as 'Good Fortune' and 'Very Healthy' adorn some towels in the same distinctive red font. 'I have many of these towels,' says the fishmonger, slightly perplexed as to why someone is asking about an old rag. A Good Morning towel is seen hanging at a fishmonger's stall at a wet market in Causeway Bay. Photo: Kylie Knott Those living in Hong Kong are likely to have a few lurking in a cupboard. Walk around the city and you will see them draped over buckets or dangling from minibus' mirrors. Pop the boot of a taxi and a few might stare back with their cheery greeting.