NewsWorld
PredictionsDigestsScorecardTimelinesArticles
NewsWorld
HomePredictionsDigestsScorecardTimelinesArticlesWorldTechnologyPoliticsBusiness
AI-powered predictive news aggregation© 2026 NewsWorld. All rights reserved.
Trending
TrumpCrisisFebruaryTariffsSafetyRefundCourtUkraineNewsDigestTimelineIssueAdditionalAnnounceSupremeChinaYearsBillionZmirCampaignIncreasedDailyMondayDays
TrumpCrisisFebruaryTariffsSafetyRefundCourtUkraineNewsDigestTimelineIssueAdditionalAnnounceSupremeChinaYearsBillionZmirCampaignIncreasedDailyMondayDays
All Articles
Hong Kong protests: former young offenders sent on mainland China exchange tours
South China Morning Post
Published about 2 hours ago

Hong Kong protests: former young offenders sent on mainland China exchange tours

South China Morning Post · Feb 23, 2026 · Collected from RSS

Summary

Hong Kong’s Correctional Services Department has launched exchange tours to mainland China for former young offenders convicted of crimes related to the 2019 social unrest to boost their understanding of national development and culture. Rounding up the department’s work over the past year, Commissioner of Correctional Services Wong Kwok-hing said on Monday that Project PATH, a rehabilitation programme for offenders jailed for 2019 protest-related activities, would be extended to cover those...

Full Article

Hong Kong’s Correctional Services Department has launched exchange tours to mainland China for former young offenders convicted of crimes related to the 2019 social unrest to boost their understanding of national development and culture.Rounding up the department’s work over the past year, Commissioner of Correctional Services Wong Kwok-hing said on Monday that Project PATH, a rehabilitation programme for offenders jailed for 2019 protest-related activities, would be extended to cover those under supervision after leaving jail.“From the beginning of this month, we have organised exchange tours for participants to let them experience the latest national developments, boost their understanding of Chinese culture as well as their sense of national belonging, concept of the nation and patriotism,” he said.As a part of the extended coverage, the department would organise exchange tours to the mainland for Project PATH participants bound by supervision orders.Young offenders and those permitted to leave prison under early release would be put under statutory supervision for at least six months.During the period, participants will have to maintain contact with correctional service officers, receive regular home or workplace visits, and request permission when wishing to leave the city.


Share this story

Read Original at South China Morning Post

Related Articles

South China Morning Post7 minutes ago
Duterte was ‘pivotal’ in murder of thousands, ICC prosecutors say

Former Philippine president Rodrigo ⁠Duterte was “pivotal” in the ⁠murder of thousands of people during his ⁠reign, prosecutors at the International Criminal Court (ICC) said on Monday, as they pushed for his trial to go ahead. The prosecutors at the Hague-based war crimes court have charged Duterte with three counts of murder as a crime against humanity, involving dozens of ‌victims that accusers say were only a fraction of the real death toll in his clampdown on alleged drug users and...

South China Morning Post8 minutes ago
Taiwan seeks clarity after US Supreme Court upends Trump’s tariff powers

Taiwan has moved swiftly to seek clarification from Washington after the US Supreme Court struck down Donald Trump’s tariff authority. The ruling prompted the US president to invoke a separate statute – Section 122 of the US Trade Act of 1974 – to impose a 15 per cent global tariff, casting fresh uncertainty over Taiwan’s trade outlook. The legal reset has raised questions in Taipei about whether tariff exemptions negotiated under the existing Taiwan-US trade framework – including preferential...

South China Morning Post9 minutes ago
What next for China’s export machine after top US court blocks Trump’s tariffs?

China’s sprawling export sector is eyeing a brief window of opportunity to front-load shipments to the United States following a Supreme Court ruling that appears to have eased tariff rates – even as industry insiders remain wary of potential shocks ahead. All eyes are now on the coming Beijing summit, where US President Donald Trump is set to meet President Xi Jinping in a visit that could prove decisive for the future of bilateral trade, analysts and exporters said. Chinese goods had been...

South China Morning Postabout 1 hour ago
Hong Kong launches own rail standards to enhance safety and sustainability

Hong Kong has, for the first time, introduced its own railway standards to support the use of cutting‑edge construction technologies, and established a dedicated inspection unit to accelerate new projects – moves that analysts say could lay the foundation for the city’s next decade of transport development. The Highways Department on Monday released a 336-page document outlining a unified and comprehensive set of technical references and guidelines for railway design, construction, operations...

South China Morning Postabout 1 hour ago
China’s Lunar New Year sees modest rise in consumer spending, early data shows

Consumer spending during China’s Lunar New Year rose modestly this year, according to early official data, as authorities extended the holiday and stepped up stimulus measures to support domestic demand. Average daily sales at major retail and catering firms rose 8.6 per cent year on year over the first four days of the break, Ministry of Commerce data showed. Across 78 pedestrian shopping streets and commercial districts monitored by the ministry, foot traffic and sales revenue grew 4.5 per...

South China Morning Postabout 1 hour ago
Dad throttled wife, child in rage over trivial quarrels, Hong Kong court hears

A senior assistant at Hong Kong’s Immigration Department has admitted to throttling his wife and five-year-old son multiple times in fits of rage over trivial quarrels. Kowloon City Court on Monday heard the guilty pleas from the 49-year-old defendant who assaulted his 39-year-old wife on three occasions between 2021 and 2024 at their home in Kwun Tong. He also attacked his son on three separate occasions between 2023 and 2025, when the boy was five years old at the time of the first...