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The current version of the autopilot is only meant for highways, and parking, so its very limited. Having said that, it's a good real world test for self-driving cars, and is paving the way for public acceptance of the concept.
 
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from 4 months ago in Hong Kong

in mainland China
hmm...why is he in a right-hand drive car?

Mainland China allow both Right and Left hand drive registration, there were a large amount of imported vehicle from Hong Kong and Macau.

However, they only follow Left hand Drive Rule
 
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http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-china-36549266

One of five Hong Kong booksellers who disappeared last year says he was forced by Chinese agents into a confession of "illegal trading".

Lam Wing Kee was seized in the Chinese city of Shenzhen last October.

He and the four other men worked at a publishing house that sold books critical of China's leaders.

Mr Lam said a confession broadcast on Chinese television in February, featuring four of the men, had been scripted.

"It was a show, and I accepted it," he told a news conference on Thursday, according to the South China Morning Post.

"They gave me the script. I had to follow the script. If I did not follow it strictly, they would ask for a retake."

HK booksellers 'author' attacks China

Four of the men from Mighty Current publishing house, Mr Lam, Gui Minhai, Lui Bo and Cheung Jiping, gave details of their alleged offences during their appearance on Phoenix TV in February.

Lam Wing Kee returned to Hong Kong on Tuesday. Only one of the men has yet to return from the mainland.

Some people in Hong Kong believe the four were detained by China because of a book about President Xi Jinping.

They said they had sold 4,000 "unauthorised" books to 380 customers in mainland China, Phoenix TV reported.

Mighty Current publishing house disappearances
_88095680_booksellers_624_comp.jpg

1. Lui Bo, general manager. Went missing: Shenzhen, 15 October 2015Returned: March 2016

2. Cheung Jiping, business manager. Went missing: Dongguan, 15 OctoberReturned: March 2016

3. Gui Minhai, co-owner. Went missing: Thailand, 17 October Still missing

4. Lam Wing Kee, manager. Went missing: Shenzhen, 23 October Returned: June 2016

5. Lee Bo, shareholder. Went missing: 30 December - he says from the mainland, Mr Lam says it was from Hong Kong Returned: March 2016

_88095679_booksellers_map_624.png

Public confessions have long been a part of China's criminal law, but experts say many confessions are forced.

In the news conference, Mr Lam also said:

  • he was arrested in Shenzhen, a southern city on the mainland, before being held overnight
  • he was then blindfolded and put on a train for up to 14 hours to the city of Ningbo
  • while there, he was kept in a small room by himself, and made to sign a document agreeing he would not contact his family or a lawyer
  • the Chinese authorities had asked him to return to the mainland and hand over disks containing the names of people who had bought the books - he said he would not now do so
  • he spoke out as he was the only one of the five men with no relatives on the mainland. "If I myself, being the least vulnerable among the five booksellers, remained silent, Hong Kong would become hopeless," he said
The defiant bookseller's bombshell revelations electrified the journalists in the room, as well as social media in Hong Kong.

At the scene: Juliana Liu, BBC News, Hong Kong
_90003028_img_3983-2.jpg

Image captionLam Wing Kee was surrounded by reporters as he gave details of his detention
No-one had expected him to tell all.

Besides Gui Minhai, who remains in custody, Mr Lam was the last of the associates of the Mighty Current publishing house to be released from detention.

The others - Lee Bo, Lui Bo and Cheung Jiping - had all been released much earlier and said little about their time in mainland China.

They had all decided it was better, perhaps safer, to stay silent.

But Mr Lam chose a different route.

He decided to take a public stand, he said, because he wants Hong Kong people to defend the system that separates this city from China.

Under Hong Kong law, Chinese police do not have jurisdiction in Hong Kong, which is governed under the principle of "One Country, Two Systems".

But the case has sparked international concern that China could be attempting to rein in freedom of expression in Hong Kong.

China's foreign ministry said its officials would not behave illegally and urged other countries not to meddle in its affairs.

Hong Kong's government said in a statement "that the police are now proactively contacting Mr Lam himself to understand more and will take appropriate follow-up action".

It added that any evidence of intervention by Chinese law enforcement agencies in Hong Kong would be "unacceptable".

"Lam Wing Kee has blown apart the Chinese authorities' story," Mabel Au, director of Amnesty International Hong Kong, said.

"He has exposed what many have suspected all along - that this was a concerted operation by the Chinese authorities to go after the booksellers."
 
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HONG KONG — Blindfolded and handcuffed, the bookseller was abducted from Hong Kong’s border with mainland China and taken to a cell, where he would spend five months in solitary confinement, watched 24 hours a day by a battery of Chinese guards.

Even the simple act of brushing his teeth was monitored by minders, who tied a string to his toothbrush for fear he might try to use it to harm himself. They wanted him to identify anonymous authors and turn over data on customers.

“I couldn’t call my family,” the man, Lam Wing-kee, said on Thursday. “I could only look up to the sky, all alone.”

Months after he and four other booksellers disappeared from Hong Kong and Thailand, prompting international concern over what critics called a brazen act of extralegal abduction, Mr. Lam stood before a bank of television cameras in Hong Kong and revealed the harrowing details of his time in detention.

“It can happen to you, too,” said Mr. Lam, 61, who was the manager of Causeway Bay Books, a store that sold juicy potboilers about the mainland’s Communist Party leadership. “I want to tell the whole world: Hong Kongers will not bow down to brute force.”

Although Mr. Lam’s assertions could not be immediately confirmed, his revelations contradicted Beijing’s claims that the booksellers had voluntarily entered the mainland to cooperate with an investigation by the Chinese authorities.

One of the men, Gui Minhai, vanished from his seaside apartment in Pattaya, Thailand, in October. Another, Lee Bo, a British citizen, disappeared from the streets of Hong Kong in December.

Mr. Lam’s account highlights the lengths to which the government of President Xi Jinping is willing to go to silence critics outside mainland China — at the risk of damaging its standing on the international stage.

To back up the government’s claims that the booksellers had voluntarily entered China, state-run television broadcast confessions by the five men; Mr. Gui, for example, tearfully said he had returned to China to face justice for his role in a fatal 2003 hit-and-run car accident in the Chinese coastal city of Ningbo.

Mr. Lam said his own words — that he had broken mainland law by publishing salacious books about Chinese leaders — had been crafted by the authorities but that he had no choice but to cooperate.

“It was a show, and I accepted it,” he said of his confession. “I had to follow the script. If I did not follow it strictly, they would ask for a retake.”

His revelations open a rare window into the workings of China’s security apparatus, which frequently uses forced confessions by lawyers, rights advocates and even celebrities to sway public opinion and justify the detentions of those who have dared to defy the party.

Mr. Lam’s claims are also likely to confirm the worst fears of Hong Kong residents, who say that Beijing has been intensifying efforts to erode the prodigious liberties enjoyed by the former British colony since it was returned to China in 1997.

“Lam Wing-kee has blown apart the Chinese authorities’ story,” Mabel Au, Amnesty International’s director in Hong Kong, said in a statement. “He has exposed what many have suspected all along: that this was a concerted operation by the Chinese authorities to go after the booksellers.”

The booksellers were key players in an industry that produces racy, rumor-filled books focused on the sex lives and power games of China’s top leaders. Although such books are banned on the mainland, where the message about politics and politicians is controlled, they are eagerly sought by visitors to Hong Kong, who return home to China with the books stowed in their luggage.

In the months since Mr. Lam and his colleagues disappeared, the industry has fallen on hard times. Causeway Bay Books has closed, and many Hong Kong bookstores have pulled titles about Chinese politics from their shelves.

The disappearances shocked people in Hong Kong and reverberated internationally. Many saw the episode as an expansion of China’s authoritarian legal system beyond its borders, in clear violation of the “one country, two systems” framework that allows Hong Kong to maintain a high degree of autonomy from Beijing.

Thousands of people took to the streets of Hong Kong to demand the booksellers’ release. Diplomats from Britain, the European Union and the United States also registered concern.

Three of the men, including Mr. Lee, have since been allowed to visit Hong Kong but later returned to the mainland. During their visits, they refused to publicly discuss the details of their disappearances. Mr. Gui, who holds a Swedish passport, is the only one still in custody.

Mr. Lam’s ordeal began on Oct. 24, during what he said was a routine trip to see his girlfriend on the mainland. As he crossed the border at the Chinese city of Shenzhen, he said he was seized by security personnel. Blindfolded and with his hands bound, he was put on a train that traveled hundreds of miles north to Ningbo.

The next few months, he said, were spent in a dingy cell, where he signed away his right to a lawyer and the right to contact his family. He said he was questioned 20 to 30 times about his role in Hong Kong’s publishing industry.

At one point, he said he was forced to sign a confession that incriminated Mr. Gui, saying his colleague had orchestrated the unlawful sale of books that harmed Chinese society.

He said the cell’s furniture was covered in padded fabric, an apparent attempt to prevent him from committing suicide. After about five months, he was moved to an apartment.

“They wanted to lock you up until you go mad,” he said.

On Thursday, Mr. Lam told reporters that Mr. Lee had told him privately that he, too, was taken to China against his will. Mr. Lam said Mr. Lee was able to get him the equivalent of about $15,000, for living expenses and as compensation for the loss of his job after the bookstore closed.

Mr. Lee did not respond to a request for comment.

The authorities apparently thought that Mr. Lam would continue to cooperate. He said they let him travel to Hong Kong on Tuesday after he promised to return to the mainland with a hard-drive full of information on customers.

Instead, Mr. Lam decided to meet with the news media. “I dare not go back,” he said. “I don’t plan on setting foot in mainland China ever again.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2016/06/17/world/asia/hong-kong-bookseller-lam-wing-kee.html?_r=0
 
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Aha, another dubious piece from NYT that is to sensationalize.

No wonder, they are banned in mainland China.

When I saw it's from NYT, I just skipped it to save my time. :rofl:
 
Last edited:
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2016-07-01 09:26:59 CRIENGLISH.com



Hong Kong celebrates the 19th anniversary of the establishment of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (SAR) on Friday, July 1st, 2016. Hong Kong Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying said Hong Kong needs to diversity its industries to maintain sustainable development, create upward opportunities for youth, and deepen relations with the mainland. [Photo: CRIENGLISH.com/Li Jing]

Hong Kong Chief Executive CY Leung has urged its people to seize the opportunities provided by national strategies.

He was speaking at a ceremony marking the 19th anniversary of the establishment of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region.

To mark the occasion, a flag-raising ceremony was held at Golden Bauhinia Square in Wan Chai, followed by a sea parade and a fly-past.

In his speech commemorating the 19th anniversary of the establishment of the Hong Kong SAR, CY Leung looked back over what had been achieved during his term in office, such as keeping inflation and the unemployment rate at a low level, as well as being able to improve housing.

But he admits Hong Kong is facing many challenges, and needs to transform traditional industries.

"These industries must move towards high value-added services if we are to raise the income level of the Hong Kong people. This is especially true for the tourism industry. Second, we should abandon the mindset of resting on our laurels. We should nurture emerging industries to enhance the upward social mobility of our young people, and to create diversified and better jobs."

CY Leung also encouraged people in Hong Kong to tap into opportunities provided by national strategies.

"Over the past 30 years or so, thanks to the opening up and reform of the Mainland, many Hong Kong wage earners have become business owners, and small enterprises have developed into large national enterprises. In the coming 30 years or so, Hong Kong's new generation can take advantage of overseas opportunities arising from the Belt and Road initiative, in addition to those in the Mainland. The young generation will be able to further expand Hong Kong enterprises into global enterprises. "

Leung said the government would continue to implement the "one country, two systems", "Hong Kong people administering Hong Kong", and a high degree of autonomy, in accordance with the Basic Law. He said the government would also continue to facilitate and promote communication, and co-operation of various sectors and political parties in Hong Kong with the Central Authorities and the mainland, and deepen mutually beneficial relationships between the two sides.



Hong Kong celebrates the 19th anniversary of the establishment of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (SAR) on Friday, July 1st, 2016. Hong Kong SAR Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying said Hong Kong needs to diversity its industries to maintain sustainable development, create upward opportunities for youth, and deepen relations with the mainland. [Photo: CRIENGLISH.com/Li Jing]

@Chinese-Dragon :enjoy:

When will we the island people start to celebrate? :D
 
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Open day marks HK return anniversary


Soldiers of Hong Kong Garrison of the Chinese People's Liberation Army (PLA) perform during the open day in south China's Hong Kong, July 1, 2016. To celebrate the 19th anniversary of Hong Kong's return to the motherland, Hong Kong Garrison of PLA held an open day, allowing local residents to visit their barracks on Friday. (Xinhua/Liu Yun)


Girls pose for pictures in front of a gunship of Hong Kong Garrison of the Chinese People's Liberation Army (PLA) during the open day in south China's Hong Kong, July 1, 2016. To celebrate the 19th anniversary of Hong Kong's return to the motherland, Hong Kong Garrison of PLA held an open day, allowing local residents to visit their barracks on Friday. (Xinhua/Liu Yun)



The military band of Hong Kong Garrison of the Chinese People's Liberation Army (PLA) perform during the open day in south China's Hong Kong, July 1, 2016. To celebrate the 19th anniversary of Hong Kong's return to the motherland, Hong Kong Garrison of PLA held an open day, allowing local residents to visit their barracks on Friday. (Xinhua/Wang Shen)


Local residents visit Shunde Missle Frigate of Hong Kong Garrison of the Chinese People's Liberation Army (PLA) during the open day in south China's Hong Kong, July 1, 2016. To celebrate the 19th anniversary of Hong Kong's return to the motherland, Hong Kong Garrison of PLA held an open day, allowing local residents to visit their barracks on Friday. (Xinhua/Liu Yun)
 
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Joshua Wong found guilty of unlawful assembly in Hong Kong

A court in Hong Kong has found student activist Joshua Wong guilty of taking part in an unlawful assembly.

Wong and two others climbed over a fence into the forecourt of the Hong Kong government complex on 26 September 2014.

http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-china-36852731
 
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HK law is weak. He will probably be sentence by a slap on the wrist. China can make an example of these guys by denying them entry to the mainland. Trust me, if you work in HK in finance sector (which is mainly the only sector of work you can find :enjoy:), you will need to travel to China for business sometime. If they can't go over due to some anti government activities in the past, it will definitely hurt their career and their pocket book.
 
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HK law is weak. He will probably be sentence by a slap on the wrist. China can make an example of these guys by denying them entry to the mainland. Trust me, if you work in HK in finance sector (which is mainly the only sector of work you can find :enjoy:), you will need to travel to China for business sometime. If they can't go over due to some anti government activities in the past, it will definitely hurt their career and their pocket book.

their career prospects ain't looking good :rofl: those suckers will regret it
 
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Joshua Wong found guilty of unlawful assembly in Hong Kong

A court in Hong Kong has found student activist Joshua Wong guilty of taking part in an unlawful assembly.

Wong and two others climbed over a fence into the forecourt of the Hong Kong government complex on 26 September 2014.

http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-china-36852731

For the irreparable damages he and his hooligans committed to the business community, he and his gangs should have been thrown into jail for a long, long time and maybe make a bankrupt so that he understand what it is like to sabotage other people livelihood
 
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