
Hong Kong lawmakers call for facial recognition system at upgraded land crossing
At a meeting of the Legislative Council's security panel on Monday, some lawmakers also expressed concern that the expanded Huanggang checkpoint, which was designed to handle 200,000 passengers and 15,000 vehicles every day between Hong Kong and Shenzhen, could overload nearby traffic.
In addition to co-location arrangements that allow travellers to clear immigration channels in both jurisdictions at a single site, Secretary for Security Chris Tang Ping-keung told the panel that a new clearance model would be adopted.
The two governments would set up counters side by side inside the port to enhance border clearance efficiency, he said.
The 'collaborative inspection and joint clearance' model, currently used at some checkpoints between Macau and Zhuhai, will allow travellers to queue up once for immigration clearance, shortening the time from around half an hour to five minutes.
'These efforts aim to facilitate the efficient and smooth flow of people and goods, and thus strengthen the connectivity between Hong Kong and other cities in the Greater Bay Area,' Tang said.
Hashtags

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


The Standard
35 minutes ago
- The Standard
Mandatory Provident Fund's first-half gains hit eight-year high
The average MPF account holder reportedly saw a paper profit of HK$24,213 between January and June. SING TAO


South China Morning Post
2 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Alibaba expert envisions AI agents transforming daily life in 5 years
Digital colleagues will be a part of everyday life in the next five years, according to an artificial intelligence (AI) expert from Alibaba Group Holding's cloud computing unit, who envisions an ecosystem of application developers creating AI agents to cater to consumer and business demands. 'Agentic AI is very popular in the industry right now,' said Huang Fei, vice-president of Alibaba Cloud and head of the company's Tongyi Natural Language Processing Lab. Speaking at the China Conference 2025 organised by the Post on Tuesday, he was referring to systems that use AI to act autonomously on behalf of users to pursue goals or complete tasks. The future AI landscape would be dominated by a small number of fundamental model providers and a larger number of developers producing such agents, Huang said. His comments underscored Alibaba's strategy of becoming a key provider of AI infrastructure and fundamental models. The company's Qwen series of open-source large language models has become popular, and Alibaba has pledged at least US$53 billion over the next three years to invest in AI infrastructure. Alibaba owns the Post. Hong Kong would be able to play a role in AI development thanks to its capital resources, research capabilities, access to mainland China, government support and legal framework, Huang said. 'Hong Kong has top-tier researchers and universities, alongside the Hong Kong government also providing a lot of support for innovation, alongside the city's strong legal system,' he said. 'It is able to provide not only the capital resources, but also the human resources and the carbon for AI development.'


South China Morning Post
3 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Hong Kong's international financial centre role gives it an edge in AI market, experts say
Advertisement 'For AI companies, having easy access to capital is extremely important,' SenseTime chief financial officer Wang Zheng said in a panel discussion at the South China Morning Post's China Conference 2025 on Tuesday. 'Hong Kong has a really deep, world-class capital market .' Founded in Hong Kong in 2014, SenseTime was able to raise 'a lot of private capital' in the city to support its growth before eventually going public on the Hong Kong stock exchange , according to Wang. 'Hong Kong is really fantastic in playing the role of a capital connector,' Wang said. 'I think this is the one area that Shenzhen and Singapore would be very hard-pressed to surpass in the foreseeable future.' That reflects efforts by Hong Kong's government to reposition the city as a regional technology hub by 2035, while bolstering its role as a bridge between mainland China and the rest of the world. Advertisement