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2018 in Hong Kong
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2017
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2018
in
Hong Kong
→
2019
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Decades:
1990s
2000s
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2020s
See also:
Other events of 2018
History of Hong Kong
•
Timeline
•
Years
Events in the year
2018 in Hong Kong
.
Incumbents
Executive branch
Chief Executive
:
Carrie Lam
Chief Secretary for Administration
:
Matthew Cheung
Financial Secretary
:
Paul Mo-po Chan
Secretary for Justice
:
Rimsky Yuen
(until 5 January), then
Teresa Cheng
Legislative branch
President of the Legislative Council
:
Andrew Leung
Judicial branch
Chief Justice of the Court of Final Appeal
:
Geoffrey Ma
Events
January
1 January
The New Year's Day March, organised by
Civil Human Rights Front
, takes place. Demonstrators from the "Co-location" Concern Group and
People Power
enter the East Wing Forecourt of the
Central Government Complex
, also known as "Civic Square", after the march ended. Scuffles occur between protesters and security guards.
[
1
]
The
Sleeping Beauty Castle
at
Hong Kong Disneyland
closes, and the last performance of the
Disney in the Stars
firework show takes place. This is to make way for the transformation of the Sleeping Beauty Castle.
[
2
]
3 January
Frankly Chu, a retired
superintendent
, is found guilty of assault occasioning bodily harm and jailed for three months, for hitting a pedestrian with a baton in
Mong Kok
during the
2014 Hong Kong protests
. He is released immediately on bail pending appeal.
[
3
]
The balloting procedure for the sale of the subsidised housing Terrace Concerto (in
Tuen Mun
) and Mount Verdant (in
Tseung Kwan O
) takes place.
[
4
]
5 January
The
State Council
approves the appointment of
Teresa Cheng
as the
Secretary for Justice
, replacing
Rimsky Yuen
, who had resigned earlier.
[
5
]
Cleaning workers at Hoi Lai Estate in
Cheung Sha Wan
end a 10-day strike.
[
6
]
An investigation by
Queen Mary Hospital
finds the behaviour of Kelvin Kwok-chai Ng, a former part-time associate professor at the hospital and the
University of Hong Kong
(HKU), 'unacceptable' and 'unnecessary'. On 13 October 2017, he left a liver transplant operation for another planned surgery in a private hospital. The report does not specify any penalty or responsibility. Ng accepts the report and hopes to become a full-time employee at the university.
[
7
]
[
8
]
In late February, HKU's
Li Ka Shing Faculty of Medicine
announces Ng's contract will not be renewed.
[
9
]
Ng has since become a consultant at the
University of Hong Kong-Shenzhen Hospital
.
[
10
]
6 January – Suspected unauthorised structures are found at the homes of Teresa Cheng, the Secretary for Justice, and her husband Otto Lok-to Poon at Villa De Mer, Tuen Mun.
[
11
]
8 January –
Patrick Ho
, former
Secretary for Home Affairs
, pleads not guilty in New York City, to federal charges that he had bribed officials from
Chad
and
Uganda
.
[
12
]
9 January
The
Buildings Department
confirms the presence of unauthorised structures at the homes of Teresa Cheng and her husband Otto Lok-to Poon, including a basement, a rooftop glasshouse, a pond, and an extended wall on the ground floor.
[
13
]
The father and stepmother of 5-year-old Sui-lam Chan, who allegedly died due to child abuse, appear in court. The prosecution says Chan was hurled up and hit the ceiling before her death, and both her and her brother have been repeatedly assaulted by bamboo sticks and scissors.
[
14
]
[
15
]
Benny Tai
,
Chan Kin-man
,
Chu Yiu-ming
,
Tanya Chan
,
Shiu Ka-chun
,
Tommy Cheung
, Yiu-wa Chung,
Raphael Wong
and
Lee Wing-tat
appear in court for charges of public nuisance during the
2014 Hong Kong protests
.
[
16
]
14 January – A 42-year-old South Korean man is arrested for murdering his wife of the same age and 6-year-old son at
The Ritz-Carlton, Hong Kong
.
[
17
]
17 January – 16 participants of the 2014 Hong Kong protests, including
Joshua Wong
,
Lester Shum
and
Raphael Wong
are found guilty of failing to comply with a court order. Joshua Wong and Raphael Wong are sentenced to jail, while Shum and the other defendants receive suspended sentences.
[
18
]
18 January
Edward Leung
and 5 other protesters during the
2016 Mong Kok civil unrest
appear in court for charges including rioting.
Ray Wong
and another protester fail to appear in court and are issued arrest warrants.
[
19
]
Philip Dykes
is elected as the next chairperson of the Bar Council of the
Hong Kong Bar Association
, defeating incumbent Paul Lam.
[
20
]
24 January – Tsz-kei Lau, the president of
Hong Kong Baptist University
(HKBU) Students' Union, and Andrew Lok-hang Chan, a fifth-year student at the HKBU School of
Chinese Medicine
, are suspended for violating the students' code of conduct, until a disciplinary investigation into their protest on 17 January is complete. Over 10 students, including Lau and Chan, protested at the Language Centre for 8 hours, and demanded more transparency in an exemption test for an otherwise mandatory
Putonghua
course. A video clip later showed Lau speaking
profanity
to staff members.
[
21
]
26 January – The
Hang Seng Index
closes at an all-time high, at 33,154.12 points.
[
22
]
27 January –
Agnes Chow
, a member of
Demosistō
, is barred from standing in the
March 2018 Hong Kong by-elections
, on the grounds that her party advocates for
self-determination
for Hong Kong.
[
23
]
31 January
Electoral officials bar
Ventus Lau
from running in the March 2018 Hong Kong by-elections, based on previous comments he had made in support of
Hong Kong independence
. The candidacy of
Au Nok-hin
, who runs in the place of Agnes Chow, is confirmed.
[
24
]
An unexploded bomb from
World War II
is found in a construction site in
Wan Chai
, the second one in 5 days.
[
25
]
February
1 February
Localist camp
Sha Tin District Councillor
James Kwok-keung Chan becomes the third candidate disqualified from the
March 2018 Hong Kong by-elections
.
[
26
]
United States lawmakers nominate
Joshua Wong
,
Nathan Law
,
Alex Chow
and other contributors to the
Umbrella Movement
for the
Nobel Peace Prize
.
[
27
]
6 February – The
Court of Final Appeal
overturns the decision of the
Court of Appeal
by ruling to free Joshua Wong, Nathan Law and Alex Chow, who were charged for their entering of the
East Wing Forecourt of the Central Government Office
during the
2014 Hong Kong protests
. The court rules the sentencing guideline endorsed by the Court of Appeal should not be applied retroactively.
[
28
]
9 February –
Hang Seng Index
closes at 29507 points, falling over 3000 points and marking the greatest weekly drop by points.
[
29
]
10 February – A
Kowloon Motor Bus
double-decker bus
running on route 872 tips over on
Tai Po Road
near Tai Po Mei in Tai Po, killing 19 people and injuring 66. The driver allegedly lost control of the bus while making a turn.
[
30
]
[
31
]
Victims say passengers have yelled at the driver for departing
Sha Tin Racecourse
late.
[
32
]
Main article:
2018 Hong Kong bus accident
12 February – Albert Kwai-huen Wong, chairman of the
Communications Authority
, resigns as he announces his failure to disclose the ownership of
China Mobile
stocks.
[
33
]
13 February – The
High Court
dismisses the election petition submitted by
Ho-tin Chan
, convenor of the
Hong Kong National Party
and rules returning officers can ban candidates from running when their political views suggest they would not uphold the
Basic Law
.
[
34
]
14 February – The
Court of First Instance
upholds the requirement that foreign domestic workers in Hong Kong must live with their employers.
[
35
]
17 February – The annual ritual of drawing fortune sticks (also known as
kau chim
) takes place at
Che Kung Miu
.
Kenneth Ip-keung Lau
, chairperson of the
Heung Yee Kuk
, and Che-kee Lee, vice-chairperson of the
Sha Tin
Rural Committee, each draws a stick on behalf of Hong Kong and
Sha Tin District
respectively. The master of ceremonies mixes up the sticks, and Lau says it was arranged by the deity
Che Kung
.
[
36
]
20 February – The
Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing
reopens its trading hall after renovation, renaming it the HKEX Connect Hall, which also houses the HKEX Museum of Finance.
[
37
]
[
38
]
24 February – Wai-yan Wan, brother of Wesley Wan and son of the former member of the
Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference
Tommy Tai-min Wan, dies from a car crash in
Sai Wan
. He is suspected to be having a heart attack before losing control of his car.
[
39
]
28 February –
Financial Secretary
Paul Mo-po Chan
releases the Budget for the 2018–19
fiscal year
.
[
40
]
March
5 March – The
West Kowloon Magistrates' Court
dismisses a charge of contempt of the
Legislative Council
against then-lawmaker
Kwok-hung Leung
, ruling the charge does not apply to lawmakers.
[
41
]
11 March – The
March 2018 Hong Kong by-elections
takes place for vacancies resulting from the disqualification of legislative councillors over the
2016 oath-taking controversy
. The four vacancies are the
Hong Kong Island
,
Kowloon West
and
New Territories East
geographical constituencies
and the
Architectural, Surveying, Planning and Landscape
functional constituency
. The opposition
pan-democrats
and
pro-government camp
each win two seats.
Vincent Wing-shun Cheng
of the
Democratic Alliance for the Betterment and Progress of Hong Kong
becomes the first pro-government candidate to win in a geographical constituency by-election.
[
42
]
[
43
]
16 March
Ka-shing Li
, Hong Kong's richest person and chairman of
CK Hutchison Holdings
and
CK Asset Holdings
, announces his retirement after the annual general meeting on 10 May.
[
44
]
[
45
]
The
government
submits the outline of the
National Anthem Bill
to the Legislative Council.
[
46
]
The
High Court
sentences Cheung-fai Lau to
life imprisonment
for sexually assaulting and murdering a 15-year-old part-time model.
[
47
]
23 March
Financial Secretary
Paul Mo-po Chan
announces the Caring and Sharing Scheme after criticisms of the Budget. The scheme will see all
Hong Kong residents
aged 18 years or above who do not own property, are not under government allowance and do not pay income tax receiving
HKD
$4000. Residents who are eligible for tax breaks announced in the Budget will receive the difference between the concessionary amount and HKD$4000.
[
48
]
The train to run on the
Guangzhou–Shenzhen–Hong Kong Express Rail Link
is named
Vibrant Express
.
[
49
]
27 March
HKTV
announces it will withdraw the application for domestic free-to-air television programme service licence submitted to the
Communications Authority
in April 2014, and will surrender its mobile television license.
[
50
]
The
MTR Corporation
announces a fare increase of 3.14% beginning June 2018, prompting backlash against the profitmaking and sole rail company in Hong Kong.
[
51
]
April
18 April –
Hong Kong Broadband Network
acknowledges a breach at an inactive customer database, affecting about 380,000 clients.
[
52
]
25 April – Opposition
pan-democrat
lawmaker
Chi-fung Hui
admits to and apologises for taking the phone of a female
Security Bureau
employee and then running into a men's washroom in the
Legislative Council Complex
during a committee meeting on 24 April. The employee was locating pro-government lawmakers in the Legislative Council Complex to ensure a sufficient number of them would turn up for the committee meeting, which has been debating a government bill for
juxtaposed border control
at the
Hong Kong West Kowloon railway station
.
[
53
]
26 April – The Task Force on Land Supply begins a 5-month public consultation on increasing land supply.
[
54
]
[
55
]
May
5 May – Opposition
pan-democrat
legislative councillor
Chi-fung Hui
is arrested over the phone-snatching incident on 24 April.
[
56
]
10 May –
Ka-shing Li
, Hong Kong's richest person officially retires and steps down as chairman of
CK Hutchison Holdings
and
CK Asset Holdings
, after holding his last meeting with shareholders.
[
57
]
11 May – A woman falls into an elevator shaft and dies at Paris Court in Sheung Wan Town Centre.
[
58
]
16 May – While covering a hearing on human rights lawyer Yanyi Xie in Beijing, a
Now TV
journalist is injured, handcuffed, dragged into a van and arrested by police officers. This comes after a
Hong Kong Cable Television
journalist is assaulted in
Sichuan
when reporting on the 10th anniversary of the
2008 Sichuan earthquake
.
[
59
]
[
60
]
[
61
]
[
62
]
17 May –
Localist camp
lawmaker
Chung-tai Cheng
keeps his seat, after the Legislative Council voted not to censure him for turning national and Hong Kong flag replicas upside down in 2016.
[
63
]
18 May –
Edward Leung
is found guilty of rioting for his role in the
2016 Mong Kok civil unrest
, but is cleared of inciting a riot.
[
64
]
[
65
]
[
66
]
30 May – Construction errors are reported at the underground platforms in
Hung Hom station
, part of the
Sha Tin to Central Link
. In 2015, Leighton Contractors (Asia), after being informed of defects in many couplers into which
reinforcing bars
were supposed to be screwed to form two main structural walls, allegedly ordered to shorten the bars to fit into the damaged couplers. The
MTR Corporation
says the error has been rectified soon after detecting 'workmanship deficiencies' in late 2015, and insists the platform is safe. The
government
later asks the company to submit a report within one week and to arrange load testing on the platform.
[
67
]
[
68
]
June
1 June – The
Hong Kong Observatory
cancels the Very Hot Weather Warning, which has been in effect for 348 consecutive hours, the longest streak since its conception in 2000.
[
69
]
[
70
]
4 June
The annual vigil commemorating the anniversary of the
1989 Tiananmen Square protests
takes place at
Victoria Park
. The organiser estimates 110,000 people attended, while the police puts the figure at 17,000.
[
71
]
[
72
]
The
Independent Commission Against Corruption
charges celebrity tutor Weslie Chi-yung Siao, professionally known as Yuen Siu, and three other people, including his wife, for illegally obtaining and leaking confidential questions from the
Hong Kong Diploma of Secondary Education
, the public university entrance examination.
[
73
]
11 June –
Edward Leung
is sentenced to 6 years in jail for rioting and 12 months for assaulting a police officer during the
2016 Mong Kok civil unrest
, to be served concurrently. Two other protesters, Lo Kin-man and Wong Ka-kui, have been jailed for 7 and
3
+
1
⁄
2
years respectively for rioting.
[
74
]
[
75
]
[
76
]
12 June – Construction issues are revealed at an underground platform in
To Kwa Wan station
, part of the
Sha Tin to Central Link
. A layer of steels bars supposed to reinforce a wall, which goes through three floors of lobby and underground platforms, is found removed. The
MTR Corporation
admits a contractor has notified it and has assured the structural safety of the wall.
[
77
]
[
78
]
14 June – The
Legislative Council
passes the
Guangzhou–Shenzhen–Hong Kong Express Rail Link
(Co-location) Bill by 40 to 20. This will allow for a
juxtaposed border checkpoint
at the
West Kowloon station
, operated jointly by Hong Kong and mainland border security departments and with mainland border security officers stationed.
[
79
]
[
80
]
26 June – A woman shoots her relatives with a handgun over an inheritance dispute, killing 1 and injuring 3.
[
81
]
[
82
]
28 June – Jason Chuk-Hung Poon, managing director of China Technology Corporation, a subcontractor of the Hung Hom station project, say his staff has notified him of the construction error in July 2015, and that he has witnessed workers wearing uniforms of Leighton Asia, the main contractor, cutting steel bars using dedicated equipment.
[
83
]
[
84
]
[
85
]
29 June –
Chief executive
Carrie Lam
announces 6 new policies to tackle the housing crisis, including changing how the prices of subsidised flats are determined, and a fee on newly built flats left vacant for a year or more.
[
86
]
July
1 July – The annual
1 July March
, organised by the
Civil Human Rights Front
, takes place. Organisers estimate 50,000 people took part, while the police say 9,800 joined, the lowest turnout recorded by both sides since 2003.
[
87
]
[
88
]
[
89
]
4 July – The
Court of Final Appeal
rules a spousal visa should be granted to the same-sex partner of an expatriate.
[
90
]
11 July – Results of the 2018
Hong Kong Diploma of Secondary Education
examination are released.
[
91
]
20 July – Former
Chief executive
Donald Tsang
loses his appeal against a conviction of misconduct in public office. His jail sentence is reduced from 20 to 12 months.
[
92
]
24 July – The
Hong Kong Monetary Authority
unveils the
2018 series of Hong Kong banknotes
.
[
93
]
29 July – The
Sai Yeung Choi Street South
pedestrian zone
closes at 10 pm and returns to full vehicular use.
[
94
]
August
1 August – The Producer Responsibility Scheme on Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment comes into effect, covering the sale of air conditioners, refrigerators, washing machines, televisions, computers, printers, scanners and monitors. Retailers are required to provide free removal service of old appliances to customers that purchase new products of the same type. Producers of these products are also asked to pay a recycling levy per item to the
government
.
[
95
]
7 August – The
Transport and Housing Bureau
says the
MTR Corporation
may have provided the government with falsified data relating to construction at
Hung Hom station
, and that the issue has been referred to the police.
[
96
]
The MTR later announces that Projects Director Dr Philco Nai-keung Wong has resigned with immediate effect, alongside three other managers. Chief executive officer Lincoln Kwok-kuen Leong, whose term will end in 2020, will also retire early. The government has asked
Frederick Ma
to stay as chairman, despite his twice offer to resign, to lead the search for a new CEO.
[
97
]
14 August –
Hong Kong independence
activist and
Hong Kong National Party
convenor
Ho-tin Chan
gives a talk at the
Foreign Correspondents' Club
(FCC), chaired by Victor Mallet, FCC vice-chairman and Asia news editor at the
Financial Times
.
[
98
]
The government expresses regrets that the FCC hosted the event.
[
99
]
This triggers the
Victor Mallet visa controversy
.
16 August – The
Central Government
announces residents of Hong Kong, Macau and
Taiwan
who work and live in
mainland China
can apply for identity cards beginning 1 September, which will enable them to access public services similar to mainland residents.
[
100
]
17 August – The West Kowloon Cultural District Authority, which is in charge of managing the
West Kowloon Cultural District
, terminates the contract for the
M+
museum with Hsin Chong Construction because of the latter's insolvency.
[
101
]
23 August – The
High Court
rules airport security rules were breached when in 2016, airline staff carried luggage which Chung-yan Leung, daughter of then-Chief Executive
Chun-ying Leung
, has left behind at the check-in counter through security screening directly to her at the boarding gate. Chun-ying Leung has personally spoken to airline staff over the phone before the incident.
[
102
]
24 August – Artistic gymnast
Wai Hung Shek
defends his title at the
2018 Asian Games
, claiming the second gold medal for Hong Kong.
28 August – Kie-chung Cheung, an associate professor at the Department of Mechanical Engineering of the
University of Hong Kong
and a member of the governing council of the university, is arrested for murdering his wife at Wei Lun Hall, a residential building of which he is a warden.
[
103
]
31 August – The
Independent Commission Against Corruption
charges Wilson Wing-yip Fung, then-Deputy Secretary for Economic Development and Labour, with accepting an advantage as a public servant and misconduct in public office, and Ung-iok Chan, sister-in-law of
Stanley Ho
, with offering an advantage to a public servant.
[
104
]
September
5 September – 13 protesters who have been jailed for their role in a 2014 protest at the
Legislative Council
against the government-proposed northeast
New Territories
development plan, win an appeal against their sentences at the
Court of Final Appeal
, and are immediately released.
[
105
]
14 September – Frankly Chu, a retired
superintendent
found guilty of assaulting a pedestrian with a baton in
Mong Kok
during the
2014 Hong Kong protests
, loses an appeal and jailed immediately to serve his remaining prison term.
[
106
]
16 September – The
Hong Kong Observatory
(HKO) issues Tropical Cyclone Signal Number 10, the highest level in the warning system, as
Typhoon Mangkhut
hits Hong Kong. This is the second year in a row that the top typhoon warning is issued; last year's
Typhoon Hato
was also classified as a Number 10 typhoon.
[
107
]
17 September – The HKO lowers the typhoon warning to Number 3, as Typhoon Mangkhut leaves Hong Kong. Most bus routes are suspended due to fallen trees, and water and electricity at some neighbourhoods, including
Heng Fa Chuen
,
Cheung Chau
and
Yuen Long
are suspended. There is severe flooding around residential blocks at Heng Fa Chuen and inside Paradise Mall, the shopping centre of the housing estate.
[
108
]
[
109
]
[
110
]
[
111
]
[
112
]
19 September – Malaysian native Kim-sun Khaw, an associate professor in
anaesthesiology
at the
Chinese University of Hong Kong
and an anaesthetist at the
Prince of Wales Hospital
, is found guilty of murdering his wife and daughter in 2015, by filling up a leaky yoga ball with
carbon monoxide
and putting it in his car. He is sentenced to
life imprisonment
.
[
113
]
23 September – The
Hong Kong section
of the
Guangzhou–Shenzhen–Hong Kong Express Rail Link
starts operation.
[
114
]
24 September – The
government
bans the
Hong Kong National Party
.
[
115
]
28 September – Researchers from the
University of Hong Kong
discovers the first human case of rat hepatitis E in a 56-year-old man from Hong Kong.
[
116
]
October
5 October – Victor Mallet, vice-chairman of the
Foreign Correspondents' Club
and Asia news editor at the
Financial Times
, is denied renewal of his work visa, after he chaired an event in August where
Hong Kong independence
activist and
Hong Kong National Party
convenor
Ho-tin Chan
gave a speech.
[
117
]
10 October –
Chief executive
Carrie Lam
delivers her second
Policy address
. Policies announced include the
Lantau Tomorrow Vision
, in which a 1700-hectare artificial island is planned, and a total ban on
electronic cigarettes
.
[
118
]
[
119
]
[
120
]
12 October –
Siu-lai Lau
is barred from running in
November 2018 Kowloon West by-election
for her advocacy of
self-determination
for Hong Kong. She was running to win back her seat in the by-election, after being disqualified from the
Legislative Council
over her way of taking the oath of office.
[
121
]
16 October – A signalling error causes severe service delay on 4 major
MTR
lines.
[
122
]
18 October – The
Immigration Department
announces a 4-year replacement procedure for new
Hong Kong identity card
.
[
123
]
22 October – A land developer applies to the judiciary for a redevelopment of the
State Theatre
, a
Grade I historic building
, and claims will conserve part of the building.
[
124
]
24 October
The
Hong Kong–Zhuhai–Macau Bridge
opens.
[
125
]
Cathay Pacific
and its subsidiary
Cathay Dragon
admits to data leakage of about 9.4 million passengers.
[
126
]
25 October –
Paternity leave
increases from 3 to 5 days.
[
127
]
30 October –
The Hang Seng Management College
is officially granted university status, becoming the second private university in Hong Kong.
[
128
]
November
1 November – The government announces the non-means-tested Public Transport Fare Subsidy Scheme, effective 1 January 2019.
[
129
]
8 November
Exiled Chinese writer and dissident
Jian Ma
announces on Twitter his speaking events were cancelled by
Tai Kwun
Center for Heritage and Arts, where the talks would take place. Tai Kwun cites not wanting the arts centre 'to become a platform to promote the political interests of any individual' as the reason.
[
130
]
Victor Mallet, former vice-chairman of the
Foreign Correspondents' Club
and Asia news editor at the
Financial Times
, is denied entry into Hong Kong as a visitor, weeks after he was refused a work visa renewal.
[
131
]
11 November – Mainland border security is found, since 2012, occupying a piece of private land at
Sha Tau Kok
within the
Frontier Closed Area
and using it for farming, without the permission of the landowner or the
Hong Kong government
.
[
132
]
[
133
]
The government later says it will 'actively follow up' on the report.
[
134
]
25 November – The
November 2018 Kowloon West by-election
takes place for the
Kowloon West
geographical constituency
. The vacancy results from the disqualification of legislative councillors over the
2016 oath-taking controversy
.
Hoi-yan Chan
from the
pro-government camp
wins. The opposition
pan-democrats
fails to regain a majority in the geographical constituencies and, hence, veto power.
[
135
]
29 November – Data leakage at credit reporting agency
TransUnion
is reported. Credit reports of high-profile figures were obtained easily due to inadequate online authentication. TransUnion has since suspended its online service.
[
136
]
30 November
5 people are dead and more than 30 people are injured as a coach carrying employees working at the
Hong Kong International Airport
crashes into a taxi at
Tsing Yi
.
[
137
]
The Dutiable Commodities (Amendment) Ordinance 2018 takes effect, banning the sale of alcohol in vending machines and to people under 18 years old.
[
138
]
Rex Tso
announces his return to amateur career and his goal to qualify for the
2020 Summer Olympics
.
[
139
]
December
2 December – Lawmaker
Eddie Chu
is barred from standing in the a rural representative election on the grounds of his implicit support of
self-determination
for Hong Kong.
[
140
]
4 December –
Patrick Ho
, former
Secretary for Home Affairs
, is found guilty of bribing officials from
Chad
and
Uganda
.
[
141
]
10 December – An empty school bus rolls downhill after the driver has exited the vehicle at North Point, killing 4 people and injuring 11.
[
142
]
12 December
HKD
$1000 banknotes
of the 2018 series enters circulation.
[
143
]
The
Department of Justice
decides not to charge former-Chief Executive
Chun-ying Leung
for corruption due to insufficient evidence, while the
Independent Commission Against Corruption
also announces no further investigative action will be taken. Chun-ying Leung signed an agreement with Australian engineering firm
UGL
as part of a takeover deal with
DTZ
, of which he is a director, to prevent him joining any rival firm within 2 years. He received part of the
HKD
$50 million payment after he became chief executive in 2012.
[
144
]
[
145
]
Main article:
Leung Chun-ying–UGL agreement
13 December – The
Court of First Instance
rules
juxtaposed border checkpoint
at the
Hong Kong West Kowloon railway station
is constitutional, and mainland border security officers can continue operating at the station.
[
146
]
18 December –
Hong Kong Children's Hospital
goes into operation.
[
147
]
21 December
Secretary for Justice
Teresa Cheng
is not charged for unauthorised structures at her home, while her husband Otto Lok-to Poon is charged for the same offence at his home.
[
148
]
The
government
announces the ratio of public to private housing supply each year will change from 6:4 to 7:3.
[
149
]
28 December – The construction and operation contracts for
Kai Tak Sports Park
is awarded to a consortium led by
New World Development
.
[
150
]
31 December – The report drafted by the Task Force on Land Supply is released, where they suggests 8 options to increase land supply.
[
151
]
[
152
]
Deaths
Yichang Liu
Charles K. Kao
Yong Jin
Nai-keung Lau
26 January
Yim-ping Chau So
, politician (b. 1927)
[
153
]
Michael Wright
, architect (b. 1912)
[
154
]
6 February –
Tsung-I Jao
,
sinologist
, historian, calligrapher and painter (b. 1917).
[
155
]
22 February –
Ching Li
, actress (b. 1948)
[
156
]
(death announced on this day)
10 March –
Hsiang Chien Tang
, textile industrialist and father of
Henry Tang
(b. 1923)
[
157
]
27 March –
Sui-kau Chan
, industrialist and philanthropist (b. 1926).
[
158
]
3 April –
Kelly Chen Lai
[
159
]
31 May –
Eunice Lam
, writer, columnist and socialite (b. 1943).
[
160
]
(death announced on this day)
8 June –
Yichang Liu
, writer, newspaper editor and publisher, considered the founder of modern literature in Hong Kong (b. 1918).
[
161
]
10 July –
Ka Ping Tin
, entrepreneur and philanthropist (b. 1919).
[
162
]
29 July –
Yei-ching Chow
, entrepreneur (b. 1935)
[
163
]
[
164
]
5 August –
Ellen Joyce Loo
, singer-songwriter (b. 1986).
[
165
]
13 August –
Gerald Nazareth
, retired judge (b. 1932).
[
166
]
30 August –
Ray
,
professional wrestler
(birth year unknown).
[
167
]
11 September –
Fou-li Tchan
, photographer (b. 1916).
[
168
]
20 September –
Ching-yuen Huang
, children's literature writer (b. 1920).
[
169
]
23 September –
Charles Kao
, electrical engineer, physicist, Nobel Prize laureate and former president and vice-chancellor of
Chinese University of Hong Kong
(b. 1933).
[
170
]
20 October
Walter Kwok
, real estate developer, former chairman and CEO of
Sun Hung Kai Properties
(b. 1950).
[
171
]
Wah Ngok
, actor (b. 1942).
[
172
]
30 October –
Yong Jin
, novelist, newspaper editor (b. 1924).
[
173
]
2 November –
Raymond Chow
, film producer (b. 1927).
[
174
]
3 November –
Yammie Lam
, actress (b. 1963).
[
175
]
(death announced on this day)
14 November –
Sze-yuen Chung
, retired politician (b. 1917).
[
176
]
21 November –
Nai-keung Lau
, politician (b. 1947).
[
177
]
3 December –
Florence Hui
, politician (b. 1974).
[
178
]
See also
List of Hong Kong films of 2018
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2019
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6 October
2019
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6 October
2019
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2019
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2019
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2019
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2019
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"Public transport fare subsidy to start in January"
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2019
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2019
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"Hong Kong gov't to investigate reports of Chinese border guards occupying land in border zone"
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2019
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"Five dead, more than 30 injured after coach rams into taxi"
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2019
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2019
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2020
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2020
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2020
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2020
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2020
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2020
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.
v
t
e
Years in Hong Kong
1843
1844
1845
1846
1847
1848
1849
1850
1851
1852
1853
1854
1855
1856
1950
1951
1952
1953
1954
1955
1956
1957
1958
1959
1960
1961
1962
1963
1964
1965
1966
1967
1968
1969
1970
1971
1972
1973
1974
1975
1976
1977
1978
1979
1980
1981
1982
1983
1984
1985
1986
1987
1988
1989
1990
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
2020
2021
2022
2023
2024
2025
v
t
e
2018 in Asia
Sovereign states
Afghanistan
Armenia
Azerbaijan
Bahrain
Bangladesh
Bhutan
Brunei
Burma (Myanmar)
Cambodia
China
Cyprus
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Japan
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Nepal
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Philippines
Qatar
Russia
Saudi Arabia
Singapore
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Syria
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Thailand
Timor-Leste (East Timor)
Turkey
Turkmenistan
United Arab Emirates
Uzbekistan
Vietnam
Yemen
States with limited
recognition
Abkhazia
Nagorno-Karabakh Republic
Northern Cyprus
Palestine
South Ossetia
Taiwan
Dependencies
, colonies
and other territories
British Indian Ocean Territory
Christmas Island
Cocos (Keeling) Islands
Hong Kong
Macau
Index:
pl
ar
de
en
es
fr
it
arz
nl
ja
pt
ceb
sv
uk
vi
war
zh
ru
af
ast
az
bg
zh-min-nan
bn
be
ca
cs
cy
da
et
el
eo
eu
fa
gl
ko
hi
hr
id
he
ka
la
lv
lt
hu
mk
ms
min
no
nn
ce
uz
kk
ro
simple
sk
sl
sr
sh
fi
ta
tt
th
tg
azb
tr
ur
zh-yue
hy
my
ace
als
am
an
hyw
ban
bjn
map-bms
ba
be-tarask
bcl
bpy
bar
bs
br
cv
nv
eml
hif
fo
fy
ga
gd
gu
hak
ha
hsb
io
ig
ilo
ia
ie
os
is
jv
kn
ht
ku
ckb
ky
mrj
lb
lij
li
lmo
mai
mg
ml
zh-classical
mr
xmf
mzn
cdo
mn
nap
new
ne
frr
oc
mhr
or
as
pa
pnb
ps
pms
nds
crh
qu
sa
sah
sco
sq
scn
si
sd
szl
su
sw
tl
shn
te
bug
vec
vo
wa
wuu
yi
yo
diq
bat-smg
zu
lad
kbd
ang
smn
ab
roa-rup
frp
arc
gn
av
ay
bh
bi
bo
bxr
cbk-zam
co
za
dag
ary
se
pdc
dv
dsb
myv
ext
fur
gv
gag
inh
ki
glk
gan
guw
xal
haw
rw
kbp
pam
csb
kw
km
kv
koi
kg
gom
ks
gcr
lo
lbe
ltg
lez
nia
ln
jbo
lg
mt
mi
tw
mwl
mdf
mnw
nqo
fj
nah
na
nds-nl
nrm
nov
om
pi
pag
pap
pfl
pcd
krc
kaa
ksh
rm
rue
sm
sat
sc
trv
stq
nso
sn
cu
so
srn
kab
roa-tara
tet
tpi
to
chr
tum
tk
tyv
udm
ug
vep
fiu-vro
vls
wo
xh
zea
ty
ak
bm
ch
ny
ee
ff
got
iu
ik
kl
mad
cr
pih
ami
pwn
pnt
dz
rmy
rn
sg
st
tn
ss
ti
din
chy
ts
kcg
ve
Prefix:
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e
f
g
h
i
j
k
l
m
n
o
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