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  • 7
    Feb
    2013
    10:27am, EST

    Living in a cage — and paying rent too? The dark side of Hong Kong's property boom

    Vincent Yu / AP

    62-year-old Cheng Man Wai lies in the 16 square foot cage that he calls home, in Hong Kong on Jan. 25, 2013.

    By Kelvin Chan, The Associated Press

    Vincent Yu / AP

    A car passes luxury houses on Victoria Peak, Hong Kong's most exclusive neighborhood, on Feb. 7, 2013.

    Published at 10:27 a.m. ET: For many of the richest people in Hong Kong, one of Asia's wealthiest cities, home is a mansion with an expansive view from the heights of Victoria Peak. For some of the poorest, like Leung Cho-yin, home is a metal cage.

    The 67-year-old former butcher pays 1,300 Hong Kong dollars ($167) a month for one of about a dozen wire mesh cages resembling rabbit hutches crammed into a dilapidated apartment in a gritty, working-class West Kowloon neighborhood.

    Vincent Yu / AP

    77-year-old Yeung Ying Biu sits inside his cage home on Jan. 25, 2013.

    Some 100,000 people in the former British colony live in what's known as inadequate housing, according to the Society for Community Organization, a social welfare group. The category also includes apartments subdivided into tiny cubicles or filled with coffin-sized wood and metal sleeping compartments as well as rooftop shacks. 

    Forced by skyrocketing housing prices to live in cramped, dirty and unsafe conditions, their plight also highlights one of the biggest headaches facing Hong Kong's unpopular Beijing-backed leader: growing public rage over the city's housing crisis. Read the full story.

     

    Vincent Yu / AP

    63-year-old Lee Tat-fong walks in a corridor while her two grandchildren -- Amy, 9, and Steven, 13 -- sit in their 50-square-foot room in Hong Kong on Jan. 25, 2013. Lee, like many poor residents, has applied for public housing but faces years of waiting. Nearly three-quarters of 500 low-income families questioned by Oxfam Hong Kong in a recent survey had been on the list for more than 4 years without being offered a flat.

    Vincent Yu / AP

    77-year-old Yeung Ying Biu eats next to his cage on Jan. 25, 2013. The cage homes date from the 1950s, when they catered mostly to single men coming in from mainland China

    Related:

    'Coffin' apartments offer wooden box homes for the living

    Manila's hidden spaces: Life on the margins in a crowded megacity

    Woman leaps to her death as housing disputes surge in China

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    Some poor residents in Hong Kong have been forced to live in small cages. Around 100,000 people in the city live in inadequate housing, according to the Society for Community Organization. NBCNews.com's Alex Witt reports.

     

    20 comments

    Guess where they get the money to pay the rent on their cages? They work in factories for companies that make goods that Americans buy at Walmart. If we didn't buy all the cheap crap they make, the people would stay in the villages where they would actually raise their own kids and grow fresh food.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: human-rights, hong-kong, asia, elderly, housing, poverty, world-news, featured
  • 2
    Jan
    2013
    8:46am, EST

    Backlash forces shark fin traders onto Hong Kong rooftops

    Antony Dickson / AFP - Getty Images

    Shark fins drying in the sun cover the roof of a factory building in Hong Kong on Jan. 2, 2013.

    Paul Hilton / EPA

    Approximately 18 thousand shark fins are left out to dry on top of an industrial building in Hong Kong's Kennedy Town district on Jan. 2, 2013.

    Bobby Yip / Reuters

    Shark fins, which cost between HK$2,880 ($369) and HK$3,580 ($459) per Chinese catty (1 pound), are seen on display inside a dried seafood store in Hong Kong on Jan. 2, 2013.

    Shark fin traders in Hong Kong have taken to drying freshly sliced fins on rooftops since a public outcry over them drying the fins on public sidewalks forced them to move the trade out of sight. 

    Activists have raised concerns that the over-harvesting of fins is causing an environmental calamity. Although sales have fallen in recent years Hong Kong remains one of the world's biggest markets for shark fins, which are used to make soup that is an expensive staple at Chinese banquets.  

    -- European Pressphoto Agency, Agence France-Presse, Reuters

    Bobby Yip / Reuters

    Thousands of pieces of shark fin are dried on the rooftop of a factory building in Hong Kong on Jan. 2, 2013. The fins were shipped from an unknown location and unloaded at a nearby pier to be dried on the rooftop.

    Bobby Yip / Reuters

    Workers lay out pieces of shark fin to dry on a rooftop of a factory building in Hong Kong on Jan. 2, 2013. Local sales of the luxurious gourmet food have fallen in recent years due to its controversial nature, but activists demand a total shark fin ban in the city, labelled by some as the shark fin capital of the world.

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    •Sign up for the NBCNews.com Photos Newsletter

    25 comments

    When we've finally killed all of the sharks in the ocean and forever upset the balance of the world's waters - only then will we see the stupidity of our ways. We don't deserve this wonderous Earth that we inhabit.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: food, hong-kong, asia, shark, world-news, shark-fin
  • 12
    Nov
    2012
    10:40am, EST

    Casino mogul Sheldon Adelson's donations to Mitt Romney put spotlight on Macau

    In a wrongful termination lawsuit, the former head of Sands operations in Macau has accused billionaire gambling mogul and Republican supporter Sheldon Adelson of links to organized crime, approving prostitution in his casinos, and making questionable payments to Chinese government officials. Adelson strongly denies any wrongdoing. NBC News' Ian Williams reports.

    By Ian Williams, NBC News

    Updated at 2:51 a.m. ET on Nov. 13: MACAU -- There is a scene in the 1952 black-and-white movie "Macao" where Robert Mitchum is welcomed by a border guard as he enters the then-Portuguese colony. The guard tells him: "It is our fine hope that all visitors to Macau should feel as untroubled here as Adam in the Garden of Eden." To which Mitchum replies gruffly, "'Untroubled’ -- that ain't the way I heard it."

    While billionaire Sheldon Adelson is no Robert Mitchum, he is now discovering that a city that has been a goldmine for his gaming company can quickly become a source of unwelcome problems.

    In the 2012 campaign, Adelson was the Republican Party's biggest contributor -- by some estimates the largest political donor ever. He donated millions to Mitt Romney’s campaign -- a political gamble that did not pay off.

    Money can't buy happiness, or an election

    One side effect, Adelson himself believes, has been to put Macau, the "Casablanca of the East", under sharp scrutiny.

    The election may be over, having cost Adelson tens of millions of dollars, but his business activities here continue to face serious allegations of wrongdoing.

    ‘Without casinos, Macau is nothing’
    Tiny Macau (population 555,000) has tended to be overshadowed by Hong Kong, its bigger, brasher neighbor an hour's ferry ride away across the mouth of the Pearl River. But over the last few years it has overtaken Las Vegas as the gaming capital of the world, and its revenues are now five times those of Sin City.

    "Without casinos, Macau is nothing," a taxi driver said. "Casinos are everything here."

    Joao Pinto, the news and program controller at local television station TDM , added: "Casinos are the blood of this city. They are a huge machine printing money, every hour, every minute, every second."

    Adelson's Las Vegas Sands owns three vast casinos here, including a gargantuan version of his flagship Las Vegas Venetian.

    Paul Ryan meets with Vegas casino mogul as hundreds protest

    He was in Macau in April for the opening of the first phase of his latest venture, Sands Cotai Central, which the company has described as "arguably the largest and most ambitious development in the history of the hospitality and gaming industry."

    Macau accounts for more than half of Sands' revenues and profits.

    Before Macau was returned to China in 1999 after 400 years of Portuguese rule, gaming had been a monopoly run by a Hong Kong-based billionaire named Stanley Ho.

    One of the first things the Chinese did was to break that monopoly, and Sands led the charge through the newly opened door, though several U.S. casinos are now here too, including Wynn Resorts and MGM.

    Takings before the handover were a paltry $2 billion; last year Macau's casinos took in $33.5 billion.

    A different atmosphere - and culture
    Most of that is Chinese money. Macau is the only place in China were gambling is legal, and the American gaming companies quickly concluded that the market was potentially enormous.

    "Gambling is part of Chinese culture," Pinto said. "It always has been."

    But the atmosphere is very different from Las Vegas.

    Walk across the vast casino floor of the Venetian in Macau -- the biggest gaming floor in the world -- and there is a hushed intensity, even when it is crowded. The stillness is only punctuated by the occasional cheering of a lucky winner, who will immediately attract a host of followers, looking to emulate his or her luck.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Luck and fatalism play a big role.

    "People don't come to Macau to enjoy themselves," David Green, who advises the Macau government on gaming regulation, said. "People seriously see it as a potential way of changing their lives."

    Yet most of the action takes place away from the casino floor in what are called "VIP rooms," the private spaces for the really high rollers who account for most the takings and the profits.

    How would Pinto, the Macau journalist, define a Chinese VIP?

    "People with (a) huge amount of cash, who don't mind gambling it away," he said.

    In China, that usually means rich businessmen and government officials -- which are frequently one and the same thing.

    PhotoBlog: Macau set to be fastest growing economy

    "To my understanding from having monitored the situation carefully, the bulk -- 60 percent -- of the profits of the western casinos appears to be associated with the VIP room operations," said Steve Vickers, who once headed Hong Kong's Criminal Intelligence Bureau and now runs his own corporate intelligence company, Steve Vickers & Associates.

    "Macau is a complicated place, a very complicated place," he said.

    Part of the reason for that are tight controls -- in theory -- on the amount of money that can be taken out of mainland China, and no official system for collecting gambling debts in the country. Companies known as junkets fill this void, organizing trips to Macau, extending credit and enforcing the collection of debts.

    Many of the junkets are reputable companies, but others are heavily influenced by organized Chinese crime groups, the triads.

    China's next leaders might curb Macau's fortunes

    "I'm not saying that all the junket operators are triad-related," Vickers said. "But I would say that nearly all the Chinese junket operators that I have had a look at, while they may not themselves by owned and controlled by triad societies, have some connection with them. That's the nature of the beast."

    Amid the uncertainly ahead of the 1999 handover, Macau was gripped by a triad war, with gangster-like executions and bombings, as rival gangs fought for control of the junket trade and the VIP rooms.

    More recently, there has been relative peace, possibly because the size of the economic cake has been growing so fast -- up to 40 per cent a year. (It has showed signs of slowing, however.)

    A recent spate of violence has raised fears, as has the expected release from prison later this year of a man knows as "Broken Tooth" Wan, a notorious triad leader who was at the center of the earlier wars.

    Complete Asia-Pacific coverage on NBCNews.com

    Lurid accusations
    Adelson's problems began with the sacking in July 2010 of Steve Jacobs, the head of Sands' Macau operations. He launched an unfair termination lawsuit in October that year, alleging that he was asked to do improper things.

    That in turn seems to have triggered in early 2011 the SEC and Justice Department investigations under the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.

    As Jacobs’ case has ground its way through Nevada courts, his allegations have become increasingly lurid -- claiming that Adelson personally approved a "prostitution strategy" for his casinos, had triad links, and made questionable payments to Chinese government officials. The latter accusation related to the employment by Sands of a well-connected local official.

    Adelson has strongly denied the claims.

     "When the smoke clears, I am absolutely-- not 100 percent, but 1,000 percent -- positive that there won't be any fire below it," he said at an industry conference last year. He has also described Jacobs' suit as "pure threatening, blackmail and extortion."

    Complete World coverage on NBCNews.com

    When I contacted Ron Reese, Sands vice president for public relations, he told me that the company takes the SEC and Justice Department investigation very seriously.

    "We cooperate fully, but others are exploiting the situation for political or personal gain. We are looking to find a resolution of these issues," he said.

    Sen. John McCain hardly helped matters when he suggested in an interview that Adelson's reliance on profits from foreign (and in particular Chinese) casinos provided a route for foreign money to enter the election campaign.

    "Obviously, maybe in a roundabout way, foreign money is coming into an American campaign," he told PBS.

    Sands clearly feels that in an election year the whole thing has become highly politicized, but that was probably inevitable once Adelson emerged as the Republican Party's biggest contributor.

    He is clearly hoping that attention now moves elsewhere and he can continue unhindered with what he believes is a perfectly legitimate business

    But there is no doubt that America's most expensive election ever has put tiny Macau under the spotlight like never before.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • China's power transfer grinds on amid widespread indifference
    • Sweeping child abuse scandal shakes BBC, other UK institutions
    • Computer expert spared prison in Vatileaks affair
    • West Bank's centuries-old olive harvest tradition under threat
    • On Twitter, pope to reach out to new followers

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    136 comments

    In the 2012 campaign, Adelson was the Republican Party's biggest contributor -- by some estimates the largest political donor ever. He donated millions to Mitt Romney’s campaign -- a political gamble that did not pay off.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: china, hong-kong, casinos, gambling, las-vegas, macau, featured
  • 9
    Oct
    2012
    11:20am, EDT

    'Coffin' apartments offer wooden box homes for the living

    Damir Sagolj / Reuters

    Akee, 34, who works as a waiter, rests in a wooden box where he lives in Hong Kong October 9, 2012.

    Damir Sagolj / Reuters

    A movie is shown on a television in a common area between wooden boxes where people live in Hong Kong, October 9, 2012.

    Damir Sagolj / Reuters

    A television placed inside a wooden box used for living in Hong Kong October 9, 2012.

    Damir Sagolj / Reuters

    A NGO worker speaks to people living in wooden boxes in Hong Kong, October 9, 2012.

    By Phaedra Singelis, NBC News

    In Hong Kong, affordable apartments are so scarce that people are living in spaces much like an enclosed bunk bed. These so called "coffin homes" fit a single bed and aren't high enough to stand in. Residents share a common space with a toilet and sink and pay about $155-180 per month for the space. Nearby is some of the most expensive real estate and luxury stores among the city's gleaming skyscrapers. 

    In New York City, a similar disparity is taking place, with new towers going up and multi-million dollar apartments in high demand while a similar building boom is happening for tiny, 200-square foot apartments. But at least they aren't coffin-sized.

    54 comments

    This lifestyle is going to be the norm in a few more years, because of the number of poorly-educated people taking whatever low-paying job they can find. Our growing population is another factor.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: china, hong-kong, housing, apartment, world-news, affordable-living
  • 8
    Oct
    2012
    5:23pm, EDT

    Hong Kong residents unhappy after US allows visa-free travel for Taiwanese

    By NBC News staff

    Hong Kong business travelers say they are frustrated by a recent decision by the United States to allow visa-free travel for Taiwanese coming to America, the South China Morning Post reported.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    "It's disappointing, because we've been asking for it for quite some time, and they still won't give it to us," Travel Industry Council executive director Joseph Tung Ya-chung told the Post last week. "We behave well, never cause trouble and spend handsomely, so why do they give it to Taiwan and not Hong Kong?"

    On Oct. 2, Homeland Security announced self-governing Taiwan will join 36 other countries whose nationals may visit the United States without a visa for 90 days, The Associated Press reported. China is not among these countries, but Hong Kong has lobbied for many years to be granted the visa-free status, according to the Post.

    A senior State Department official told the AP that including Taiwan in the visa waiver program was consistent with the U.S. commitment to "robust, unofficial relations" with the island.


    Richard Vuylsteke, the president of the American Chamber of Commerce in Hong Kong told the Post that the chamber had been lobbying the U.S. State and Homeland Security departments for more than five years.  

    "All of the reasons Taiwan was approved... Hong Kong is also very strong in," he told the Post. "My private speculation is they don't know how to handle mainland Chinese with [Hong Kong] resident status."

    In Taiwan's case, waiving the visa requirements is also viewed as a response to the island lifting import restrictions on U.S. beef, the AP reported, as well as a reaction to President Ma Ying-jeou's easing tensions with China. 

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Debt-choked Greece aims to sell off islands, marinas, more
    • Abu Hamza, 4 others tied to al-Qaida arrive in US
    • New role for rescued bear cubs
    • Americans travel to Pakistan to protest US drone strikes
    • Court: Kenyans tortured by colonial regime can sue UK
    • Tourists fined as Rome declares 'War on the Sandwich'
    • Stay informed: Sign up for our newsletter

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

    49 comments

    Taiwan = Friends and allies. Hong Kong = Communist China and potential espionage! Now why should that be so hard for Hong Kong and mainland China to figure out?

    Show more
    Explore related topics: taiwan, china, hong-kong, featured
  • 2
    Oct
    2012
    6:58am, EDT

    Seven crew arrested after Hong Kong boat collision kills 38

    Vincent Yu / AP

    A half submerged boat is lifted by cranes Tuesday, after Monday night's collision near Lamma Island, off the southwestern coast of Hong Kong Island.

    By NBC News staff and wire reports

    Police on Tuesday arrested seven crew members from two boats carrying partygoers that collided, killing at least 38 people in one of Hong Kong's deadliest maritime accidents.

    Police Commissioner Tsang Wai-hung said six people, including captains from both vessels, were detained on suspicion of endangering passengers by operating the craft unsafely. "We expect further persons to be arrested," Tsang said. Police announced a seventh arrest after his comments.

    Tsang said police suspect both crews had not "exercised the care required of them by law," but he did not offer details.

    Salvage crews were raising the Lamma IV, which sank after colliding with a ferry Monday as it carried partygoers to a fireworks show celebrating China's national day.

    Hong Kong police have arrested six crew members after  a company boat and a ferry carrying more than 120 collided in what is being called Hong Kong's worst maritime disaster in more than 40 years. NBC's Ian Williams reports.  




    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    More than 100 people from the party boat were rescued and sent to hospitals. The ferry was damaged but completed its journey, and some of its passengers were treated for injuries.

    The ferry collided with a boat owned by utility company Power Assets Holdings Ltd., which was taking its workers and their families to famed Victoria Harbor to watch a fireworks display in celebration of the national day and mid-autumn festival.

    PhotoBlog: Mourning begins as bodies are recovered from ferry crash

    Police are interviewing survivors to determine if others were still missing following the accident. Hong Kong Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying has ordered a full investigation into the crash, the worst maritime accident in the territory's waters in 40 years.

    Lueng rejected suggestions that Hong Kong needed to overhaul rules governing its busy sea lanes, the South China Morning Post reported.

    "This is definitely an isolated incident. The marine territory of Hong Kong is safe," he said.

    Dozens gathered at Kwai Chung Public Mortuary on Tuesday looking for relatives, the Post reported.

    There was no immediate word about how Monday night's collision occurred on the tightly regulated waterways of one of Asia's safest places, although it appeared human error was involved. The evening was clear and both vessels should have been illuminated by running lights when they crashed near Lamma Island off the southwestern coast of Hong Kong island.

    Vincent Yu / AP

    Relatives of the victims throw paper money Tuesday as they pay tribute to the ill-fated people aboard a boat that sank Monday night near Lamma Island, off the southwestern coast of Hong Kong Island.

    Witnesses Sarah Blackman told the BBC she was on board one of the boats involved.

    "I was on the top deck of the ferry and felt the impact — it threw people off their seats. The sound the collision made was horrific," she told the BBC.

    "Our ferry cut its engines and a crew member checked if passengers had sustained injuries from the impact. Our engines went back on, and a couple of other passengers and I went back to the rear of our ferry to look for the other boat that was now behind us, and that is when we saw it sinking in the water. As far as I'm aware, no lifeboats were on board — just life buoys and life jackets," she added.

    Six crew members have been arrested after a boat and a ferry collided in Hong Kong killing at least 37-people as they headed to a holiday fireworks display. TODAY's Natalie Morales reports.

    Survivors told local television stations that the power company boat started sinking rapidly after the 8:23 p.m. (8:23 a.m. ET) collision. One woman said she swallowed a lot of water as she swam back to shore.

    A man said he had been on board with his children and didn't know where they were. Neither gave their names.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Hong Kong ferry collision kills 25
    • Two female tourists freed after Ecuador kidnap ordeal
    • Colonial sins return to haunt former world powers
    • Death threats force Afghan actress into hiding
    • Experts: Four leopards being killed each week for skins in India
    • In Iran, sanctions bite and currency collapses
    • Trial of pope's ex-butler over leaked papers begins
    • Stay informed: Sign up for our newsletter

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    47 comments

    The captain of the ferry may very well have left the scene because he was concerned about the integrity of his boat. Maritime law does require a vessel at sea to render aid to another. But not at it's own peril. We don't have many facts at this point.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: boat, china, hong-kong, world, ship, asia-pacific, ferry, featured
  • 1
    Oct
    2012
    12:42pm, EDT

    At least 36 dead after Hong Kong ferry hits party boat

    Tyrone Siu / Reuters

    Rescuers search for survivors in a partially-submerged boat after two vessels collided in Hong Kong waters on Monday.

    By Kari Huus, NBC News

    Updated at 11:16 p.m. ET: At least 36 people died and dozens were injured when a ferry carrying more than 120 people on a company outing collided with another ferry and sank near an island south of Hong Kong on Monday night in one of the city's worst maritime accidents.

    The ferry belonging to the Hong Kong Electric Company was taking staff and family members to watch a fireworks display to celebrate China's National Day and mid-autumn festival when it hit the other ship and quickly began sinking near Lamma island.

    Some survivors said people had to break windows to swim to the surface. "We thought we were going to die. Everyone was trapped inside," said another middle-aged woman.

    Teams of men in white coats, green rubber gloves and yellow helmets carried corpses off a police launch in body bags on Tuesday. Local media reported that children were among the dead.

    More than 100 people were sent to five hospitals and nine people suffered serious injuries or remain in critical condition, the government said in a statement.

    The search for victims would continue overnight on Tuesday, the fire department said, because it was uncertain whether there were more people unaccounted for in the incident.

    The crash took place at 8:23 p.m. as a boat was traveling from Lamma Island towards the main island of Hong Kong to view the National Day fireworks display.


    It was hit by a passenger ferry that regularly travels the 40-minute route between Hong Kong's Central District to Yung Shue Wan, a former fishing village on Lamma that is now favored by tourists and expatriate professionals.

    More than 120 people were aboard the Hong Kong utility vessel.

     


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    "Low visibility and many obstacles on board" made rescue difficult, according to the fire department.

    Many passengers trapped in the flooded upturned ferry before it sank, Reuters reported, citing survivors.

    "The rear of the ferry started to sink," a survivor told the Post. "I suddenly found myself deep under the sea. I swam hard and tried to grab a life buoy. I don’t know where my two kids are."

     

    Richard A. Brooks / AFP - Getty Images

    A victim is carried ashore by rescue personnel after a ferry carrying about 120 people collided with another commercial vessel off Hong Kong late Monday.

    The government initially said a ferry collided with a tugboat.

    Later, it said both boats were passenger vessels, but did not give details.

    Several local media outlets reported that the second boat was a ferry operated by Hong Kong & Kowloon ferry.

    That vessel was carrying about 100 passengers, some of whom were slightly injured, the South China Morning Post, citing Radio and Television Hong Kong.

    "Relevant government departments are making all-out efforts to rescue people who fell into the sea after the collision. Senior officials and I will closely monitor the situation. We will do whatever we can for remedial actions,” said Hong Kong's top government official Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying on Monday night.

    Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Israelis are prepared — or not — for an Iran attack
    • Colonial sins return to haunt former world powers
    • Experts: Four leopards being killed each week for skins in India
    • In Iran, sanctions bite and currency collapses
    • Trial of pope's ex-butler over leaked papers begins
    • 'Lady whisperer': Cabbie snaps topless female passengers
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    • Amid Syria's civil war violence, a strange calm in the capital
    • Royal censorship? BBC 'sorry' for daring to report queen's comments
    • Stay informed: Sign up for our newsletter

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

    Follow Kari Huus on Facebook

    21 comments

    Condolences and prayers go to the victims' family and friends.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: hong-kong, ferry, kari-huus
  • 28
    Sep
    2012
    10:39am, EDT

    Lesbian heiress Gigi Chao on 'loving terms' with father despite $65 million dowry offer

    Bobby Yip / Reuters

    Gigi Chao, seen in the conference room of her office in Hong Kong Thursday, has received a flood of offers of dates and marriage from men.

    By The Associated Press

    HONG KONG -- The daughter of a flamboyant Hong Kong tycoon -- who has offered $65 million to any man who can woo her away from her lesbian partner -- said she's not upset with her father. Still, it's unlikely she will be accepting any of the marriage proposals flooding in.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Cecil Chao made world headlines this week when he offered the unusual marriage bounty after learning that his daughter, Gigi Chao, had eloped with her partner to France.

    "I'm actually on very, very loving terms with my father. We speak on a daily basis. He just has a very interesting way of expressing his fatherly love," the 33-year-old told The Associated Press.

    CNBC's Robert Frank has all the details on the story about Gigi Chao's father who is offering $65 million to any man able to marry her.

    She said her father offered the reward because he was upset after learning she had "a church blessing in Paris" with her girlfriend of the past several years.

    "What this whole episode really highlights is that perhaps still, the Chinese — or in fact the Hong Kong mentality — can perhaps tolerate the 'don't ask, don't tell' view of sexuality," she said. "But as a social statement, it's still very much a sensitive issue."

    Hong Kong 'playboy tycoon' offers $65 million to find husband for lesbian daughter

    Hong Kong decriminalized homosexuality in 1991, but it does not legally recognize same-sex marriage.

    Cecil Chao is the chairman of Hong Kong property developer Cheuk Nang Holdings and has a reputation for being a playboy.

    Kin Cheung / AP

    Cecil Chao, chairman of Hong Kong property developer Cheuk Nang Holdings, pictured Friday, offered $65 million to any man who can woo her away from her lesbian partner.

    He once claimed to have had 10,000 girlfriends but has never married.

    He's also known for his love of Rolls-Royces and for being a qualified helicopter pilot, a skill he shares with Gigi Chao, one of his three children by three different women.

    Cecil Chao said Friday in a separate interview with the AP that reports that his daughter had married were just rumors.

    He added that he has received hundreds of offers from suitors since he made the offer and his daughter has probably had thousands.

    "I was very surprised about the reaction from around the world," said the 76-year-old tycoon, sporting gold, mirrored sunglasses and a sport jacket over an unbuttoned polo shirt. "Thousands of people writing to say they want to be my in-laws."

    Australia lawmakers reject gay marriage plan

    He said he's offering the money because he wants to make sure his daughter has a comfortable life in Hong Kong, which he believes will require a house worth $19 million. The rest of the money can be used for investments, he said.

    "Living a comfortable life in Hong Kong, not super-luxury, takes HK$500 million ($65 million)," he said.

    When asked whether she would accept an eligible suitor, Gigi Chao laughed off the question, saying, "We'll just worry about that when the time comes."

    More world stories from NBC News:

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    83 comments

    Good for her. She accepts herself and lives her life openly and honestly, no matter what her father thinks. She also has a good relationship with him even though he would like things to be different. I'm happy for her!

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    Explore related topics: china, hong-kong, marriage, lesbian, featured, cecil-chao, gigi-chao
  • 11
    Sep
    2012
    5:31am, EDT

    Bailiffs shut down Hong Kong's long-running Occupy camp

    Philippe Lopez / AFP - Getty Images

    'Occupy' protesters hold onto their position during an eviction process from the HSBC bank headquarters area in Hong Kong on September 11, 2012. The authorities sent bailiffs to evict protesters camped outside the bank's headquarters, the last outpost of the anti-capitalist movement in Asia.

    Philippe Lopez / AFP - Getty Images

    A bailiff, left, shows a notice to a protester as members of the media crowd around during an eviction process from the HSBC bank headquarters area in Hong Kong on September 11, 2012.

    The Associated Press reports from Hong Kong — One of the global Occupy movement's longest-running encampments came to an end Tuesday in Hong Kong as bailiffs cleared out anti-capitalist activists and their belongings from a site underneath HSBC's Asian headquarters.

    See more pictures of the Occupy movement on PhotoBlog

    As nightfall neared, a handful of them clung to two sofas, all that was left of a camp that had included a dozen tents, tables, bookcases, gas cookers and lamps. They were surrounded by black-clad bailiffs who dragged them away one by one after earlier cataloguing and packing up their belongings. Read the full story.

    Philippe Lopez / AFP - Getty Images

    Bailiffs remove a tent erected by protesters at their camp outside the HSBC bank headquarters in Hong Kong on September 11, 2012.

    Kin Cheung / AP

    Bailiffs remove a protester from the headquarters of HSBC in Hong Kong on September 11, 2012.

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    2 comments

    (H)uman (S)lavery (B)y (C)redit.

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  • 7
    Sep
    2012
    11:42am, EDT

    Thousands in Hong Kong protest China's influence on new school curriculum

    Kin Cheung / AP

    Thousands of protesters turn out outside the government headquarters in Hong Kong, on Sept. 7. Parents, teachers and pupils along with activists in the former British colony continued their protest against the government's plan to introduce a new subject "Moral and National Education" into a new curriculum, starting from new school year.

    Philippe Lopez / AFP - Getty Images

    A child holds a sign as protesters sit near the government's headquarters in Hong Kong on Sept. 7, during a protest against plans to introduce Chinese patriotism classes.

    Tyrone Siu / Reuters

    A man gets his head shaved as a sign of protest during a demonstration against the launch of national education outside government headquarters in Hong Kong on Sept. 7.

    Reuters -- Protests in Hong Kong ahead of an election on Sunday are posing a major test for the city's new leader as voter discontent fueled by anger over perceived meddling by Beijing threatens to shake up the political landscape.

    This time round, Hong Kong's legislature will have a more democratic flavor - it has been expanded from 60 to 70 seats, with just over half of them to be directly elected.

    But the results are likely to reflect a recent upsurge in anti-China sentiment, which has been exacerbated by a plan for a school curriculum extolling the achievements of the Chinese Communist Party.

    Thousands of people have demonstrated outside government headquarters for the past week demanding the school program be scrapped, forcing Leung Chun-ying to cancel what was to have been his first major international engagement as Hong Kong's leader at an Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum in Russia.

    On Friday evening, the crowds swelled further as tens of thousands of ordinary citizens, many dressed in black, denounced the curriculum as Communist Party propaganda which glossed over the darker aspects of Chinese rule, hitting a nerve in the former British colony that remains proud of its freedoms 15 years after London handed it over to Beijing.

    "I am really scared (about) this national education," said a retired fireman in the crowd with his five-year-old grandson. "They really aren't talking the truth. They are telling a lie to the children."

    The protests have included hunger strikes and the parading of a replica of the Goddess of Democracy statue which was erected in Beijing's Tiananmen Square during the 1989 demonstrations and crackdown.

    Continue reading.

    Tyrone Siu / Reuters

    Thousands protest against the launch of national education in schools outside government headquarters in Hong Kong on Sept. 7.

    Kin Cheung / AP

    Mother ties a black ribbon on her son's arm to demand withdrawal of the national education plan at a primary school in Hong Kong, on Sept. 7.

    Kin Cheung / AP

    Students show the placards reading "Withdraw" during a demonstration outside government headquarters in Hong Kong, on Sept. 7.

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    9 comments

    Way to go, people from Hong Kong, I am proud of you!

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  • 4
    Sep
    2012
    7:27am, EDT

    Hong Kong protests grow against China 'brainwashing' in schools

    Philippe Lopez / AFP - Getty Images

    Students set up a banner in front of the Central Government Complex in Hong Kong on September 4, 2012 as students and teachers protested for a sixth straight day against plans to introduce Chinese patriotism classes. Protesters at the government headquarters said they would not vote for parties that supported "national education", which they say is a bid to brainwash children with Chinese Communist Party propaganda.

    Philippe Lopez / AFP - Getty Images

    A student on hunger strike, left, has his blood pressure checked in front of the Central Government Complex in Hong Kong on September 4, 2012.

    Reuters reports — Thousands of protesters surrounded Hong Kong's government headquarters on Monday over a plan to introduce a pro-China school curriculum that they describe as an attempt to brainwash students.

    More news and analysis from China on Behind the Wall

    Chanting "No to brainwashing education. Withdraw national education", some 8000 people denounced a Hong Kong government-funded booklet entitled "The China Model" they say glorifies China's single Communist party rule while glossing over more brutal aspects of its rule and political controversies. Read the full story.

    Philippe Lopez / AFP - Getty Images

    Students shout slogans in front of the Central Government Offices in Hong Kong on September 3, 2012.

    Philippe Lopez / AFP - Getty Images

    Students paint banners in front of the Central Government Complex in Hong Kong on September 4, 2012.

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    2 comments

    The same thing is happening here. Except it is Obama and the Liberals who are indoctrinating the kids.

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  • 24
    Jul
    2012
    2:45pm, EDT

    After Hong Kong weathers typhoon, anger roils over Beijing flooding deaths

    A powerful typhoon swept through Hong Kong, pounding the region with heavy rain and strong wind. NBC's Ed Flanagan reports.

    By Ed Flanagan, NBC News

    BEIJING – Hong Kong battened down the hatches Monday and rode out the strongest typhoon to hit the city in 13 years.

    For the first time since 1999, Hong Kong raised its Signal 10 typhoon warning – the highest on the city’s weather observatory scale – for several hours Monday evening as typhoon Vicente pounded the region with gale force winds said to have reached speeds as high as 101 miles per hour. 

    Hong Kong authorities reported 129 people were injured by the typhoon, with as many as 30 of the injuries caused by flying debris scooped up by the high winds. Seven incidents of flooding were reported in Hong Kong’s New Territories region.

    Meanwhile, Beijing suffered through a 10-hour downpour over the weekend that dumped 6.7 inches of rain in parts of the city and as much as 18 inches in the worst hit parts on the outskirts of Beijing in what is being called the worst flooding to hit the Chinese capital in six decades. 

    The subsequent severe flooding killed at least 37 people in the country's capital and affected nearly two million people, sparking millions of angry messages and complaints on China’s Twitter-like service, Weibo, in recent days.  Users posted countless home videos and pictures of cars struggling through wheel-deep water, waterfalls cascading down into Beijing's subway entrances and cars being swept away by the currents.

    The differing level of destruction between the two cities provoked outrage at Beijing’s government, with critics asking why the city’s infrastructure failed to buffer the storm.


    Hong Kong relatively unscathed in typhoon's aftermath
    In Hong Kong, the damage from the typhoon wasn’t nearly as bad. Trees throughout the city were overturned while flying debris reportedly caused some minor structural damage in parts of Hong Kong’s usually busy financial district of Central. The high winds were said to have also whipped up large waves in Hong Kong’s Victoria Harbor which pounded walkways and ferry terminals around the famous city skyline.

     

    The brewing storm sent office workers scrambling home as they hurried to avoid a partial public transportation suspension in the lead-up to the storm. Non-essential government offices were also closed early Monday and port and airport authorities shut down operations until the storm passed.

    During the worst of the storm in the early hours of Tuesday morning, the BBC reported that 60 flights were cancelled, an additional 60 more delayed and 16 diverted.

    By Tuesday 8 a.m. local time, the Hong Kong Observatory reported a weakened Typhoon Vicente was heading away from Hong Kong, allowing public transportation and flights from Hong Kong International Airport to resume. Trade on Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index also resumed earlier Tuesday.

    The typhoon is reportedly creeping its way into China’s Guangdong province, where weather experts were warning that Vicente could still dump as much as 12 inches of rain in affected areas.

    The typhoon comes as China is experiencing serious weather disturbances throughout the country. Near China’s central metropolis of Chongqing, heavy rains have caused flooding and brought the Three Gorges Dam – the world’s largest hydropower dam – perilously close to its largest flood peak this year.

    Critics pound government’s response to Beijing storm

    While Hong Kong seemed to weather the storm, nearly every aspect of the government’s response to the Beijing flooding has been criticized by the public, with much of the anger being directed at the shoddy drainage system. Netizens have also been quick to complain about the Beijing municipal government’s lack of preparedness for dealing with the disaster and the city’s failures in weather forecasting and deploying a good storm-warning service.

    Beijing officials are saying that economic losses from the storm will surpass $1.5 billion dollars. But the PR hit to the city’s vaunted new infrastructure just four years after its coming out party during the summer Olympics has been far more costly -- especially considering the relatively minor damage suffered by Hong Kong from a major typhoon.

    Public outrage over Beijing deaths

    “Hong Kong just experienced the biggest typhoon in 13 years, but there are only seven reports of flooding, one report of landslide and no one died,” wrote one angry poster on Weibo comparing the Hong Kong typhoon with Beijing’s flooding. “The media effectively announced the alert, and reported the complaints of its citizens…The whole society functions under the normal rhythm.”

    “The rainfall in Beijing and the typhoon in Hong Kong,” stated another irate poster. “Two completely different systems are shown in the same mirror.”

    Sensitive to the great public outcry, Weibo began censoring overly critical posts on the subject of the Beijing floods. Citing alleged directives from the Beijing Municipal Committee Department of Propaganda, the China Digital Times posted reputed orders from the department that called for “public opinion guidance concerning yesterday’s rainstorms” in the form of state-run media shifting the focus of its news stories away from issues like the failure of the city’s drainage system to features that “emphasize the power of human compassion over the elements.”

    On the edge of the Gobi desert, Beijing has not always had to deal with large rainstorms like Hong Kong, which is regularly in the season path of typhoons in the South China Seas area. Still, with more heavy rains expected later this week, local officials here will certainly be feeling the heat to keep the city largely dry throughout the rest of this rainy season.

    NBC News’ Tianzhou Ye contributed to this report.

    1 comment

    "in lieu of"??? Seriously?

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