Cigarette butts ‘strong evidence’ of smoking ban breach at work sites: Chris Sun
Business

Cigarette butts ‘strong evidence’ of smoking ban breach at work sites: Chris Sun

Labour chief reveals further details of proposed ban and lays out other priorities, including injury compensation mechanism for online delivery workers Cigarette butts will be considered “strong evidence” of a possible breach under a proposed construction site smoking ban, Hong Kong’s labour chief has said, even as he sought to reassure contractors that preventive measures could shield them from the maximum HK$400,000 (US$51,070) fine. It also emerged at the inquiry that no prosecutions were initiated despite 17 checks at the estate undergoing renovation, as Labour Department inspectors were unable to catch smokers in the act or trace the origins of the cigarette butts found there. Sun also outlined his remaining priorities for the final year of the current term, including the introduction of a statutory injury compensation mechanism for online platform delivery workers and reforms to a manpower retraining body to address the impact of artificial intelligence (AI). Touching on his proposed ban on smoking at construction sites, he said: “For any contractor, if there are a lot of cigarette butts at the time of inspection, that by itself is going to be very strong evidence for us to take further action.

Trump’s China return: what’s changed since his ‘friendly’ 2017 visit
Business

Trump’s China return: what’s changed since his ‘friendly’ 2017 visit

Nearly a decade after his first-term visit, Trump returns to Beijing amid tensions over tariffs, Taiwan and tech rivalry Don’t look for a historic breakthrough. The focus is expected to be on extending the trade truce, locking in fresh Chinese purchases of American goods, and keeping tensions from boiling over. Watch for announcements on Boeing jets, agricultural products, energy deals, rare earth supply stability, and cooperation on fentanyl. Through sanctions and public calls, the US is pressing China to use its influence on Iran to end the crisis in the Middle East. However, Beijing blames the US and Israel for the conflict and is resisting the sanctions. This mutual mistrust risks turning the Iran issue into a fresh source of friction during the summit. Other thorny geopolitical issues might include North Korea and the South China Sea. Short-term wins for US exporters are likely, but deeper structural problems, such as AI and other technological competition, supply chain security, and the Taiwan issue, are unlikely to be solved in one visit. Anticipate the full red-carpet treatment, grand banquets and plenty of Trump handshakes with Chinese President Xi Jinping.

China woman fined for applying make-up, dancing while driving; claims assisted driving more reliable
Business

China woman fined for applying make-up, dancing while driving; claims assisted driving more reliable

SUV-driving woman eats snacks while travelling through tunnel, posts videos online of her ‘dangerous’ driving, prompts police action A woman in eastern China has been fined for applying make-up and dancing behind the wheel, then claiming her car’s driver-assistance system drove better than she could. According to CCTV News, the driver, surnamed Lin, is from Wenzhou in Zhejiang province and had repeatedly posted videos online flaunting her vehicle’s assisted driving. In the widely shared clips, Lin is seen travelling through a tunnel with the system activated, both hands off the steering wheel, while applying foundation and lipstick, moving to music and eating snacks. She was driving an AITO SUV worth about 500,000 yuan (US$73,000), part of a premium smart vehicle brand backed by Chinese technology giant Huawei. Lin had also decorated the driver’s seat with flowers and ornaments. The distance she travelled has not been disclosed. Local traffic police recently contacted her after internet users reported her for dangerous driving. “Although my hands were doing other things, I was still thinking about driving,” Lin told officers.

Trump, Tehran and a Qatari tanker transit: here’s what happened overnight
Business

Trump, Tehran and a Qatari tanker transit: here’s what happened overnight

The US-Israel war against Iran has now entered its tenth week and there has been little progress on the stalled peace talks. These are the major takeaways from what happened overnight. What did Trump say? Iran reportedly sent a response to Washington’s latest proposal – a one-page memo aimed at ending the war – but it was rejected by US President Donald Trump. “TOTALLY UNACCEPTABLE!” he wrote on social media on Sunday. Tehran’s Tasnim news agency, citing an “informed source”, reported that...

How Hong Kong could ease its ‘positive problem’ of full metals warehouses
Markets

How Hong Kong could ease its ‘positive problem’ of full metals warehouses

15 LME-approved warehouses are already full, underscoring city’s ambition to be a commodities centre – and its urgent need for more space Just over a year after the London Metal Exchange (LME) approved its first batch of warehouses in Hong Kong, the city now hosts 15 facilities run by seven operators, with close to 25,000 tonnes of metals stored. Chamberlain described it as a “very positive problem” – though one not easily solved. What is the LME, and when did it set up warehouses in the city? Globally, LME-approved third-party operators run about 450 warehouses across the US, Europe and Asia, including Malaysia and South Korea, to store metals for investors and end users to trade or use to secure financing from banks.

Israel’s election may end the Netanyahu era but not the ‘forever wars’
Business

Israel’s election may end the Netanyahu era but not the ‘forever wars’

After nearly two decades and six terms in office, Israel’s prime minister could be on his way out. But little looks likely to change The vote, constitutionally set for this October, is shaping up as a referendum on the prime minister’s central claim to power: that only he can keep Israel safe. Not only that, but the regime in Tehran survives – despite Netanyahu’s best efforts – with what analysts describe as a greater motivation than ever to acquire a nuclear weapon. “Israel has never been less secure,” Israeli-American geopolitical analyst Shaiel Ben-Ephraim told This Week in Asia. “In a country obsessed with security, this is what matters.” Nearly two-thirds of Israelis believe Netanyahu should not stand for re-election, recent opinion polls show – a damning verdict driven not only by the intelligence failure of October 7 but by the perception that he has deliberately prolonged the wars to stave off legal accountability, according to Middle East researcher Annelle Sheline.

Jailed Iran Nobel laureate Narges Mohammadi transferred to hospital after medical crisis
Business

Jailed Iran Nobel laureate Narges Mohammadi transferred to hospital after medical crisis

The activist had collapsed in prison over a week ago, and her family has been pleading for her to get the medical care she needs Nobel Peace laureate and activist Narges Mohammadi has been transferred to a Tehran hospital more than a week after collapsing in prison, her foundation said on Sunday. Her transfer comes after days of pleading by her family and others who described her condition as critical. Her foundation said she has been granted a prison sentence suspension on bail. It was not clear for how long her sentence is suspended, the foundation said. Mohammadi had been imprisoned since December in Zanjan prison. She lost consciousness twice and was transferred to a local hospital on May 1. A statement from her foundation said the suspended sentence is not enough and that Mohammadi needs “permanent, specialised care”. The statement added that “we must ensure she never returns to prison to face the 18 years remaining on her sentence.

Chinese 6-seat electric SUVs to stand out amid weak domestic sales, says Morgan Stanley
Business

Chinese 6-seat electric SUVs to stand out amid weak domestic sales, says Morgan Stanley

Chinese SUVs storm the premium segment with fresh momentum, giving German marques their toughest test in years The spacious vehicles, increasingly popular among wealthy families in mainland China, could drive a rebound in the world’s largest car and electric vehicle (EV) market as they combined Chinese EVs’ technological edge with competitive pricing, according to Morgan Stanley. Beijing’s initiative to end profit-squeezing competition, including reining in subsidies, had spurred Chinese carmakers to accelerate launches, with six-seat SUVs a focus, said Tim Hsiao, head of the Greater China auto and shared mobility research team at Morgan Stanley. “The structurally high-frequency launches will become a new norm because of the competition,” Hsiao told the South China Morning Post. “Many of the flagship SUVs are expected to be the key volume drivers,” the veteran auto analyst said, though he cautioned that demand would take time to fully assess. Overall EV sales remained sluggish, with retail sales down 5 per cent in April, preliminary data from the China Passenger Car Association (CPCA) showed.

Taiwan’s Cheng Li-wun on cross-strait peace, meeting Xi Jinping and managing ties with US
Business

Taiwan’s Cheng Li-wun on cross-strait peace, meeting Xi Jinping and managing ties with US

Cheng Li-wun is the chairwoman of Taiwan’s largest opposition party, the Kuomintang (KMT). In this far-ranging interview, she discusses her vision for peace and cooperation between Taiwan and mainland China, her meeting in April with Communist Party chief Xi Jinping and her coming trip to the United States in June. The original interview was conducted in Chinese. SCMP Plus members can read a Chinese version of the transcript here. Cross-strait relations have been increasingly tense for more than...

Taiwan’s opposition KMT leader on restoring stable peace with Beijing
Business

Taiwan’s opposition KMT leader on restoring stable peace with Beijing

Cheng Li-wun is the chairwoman of Taiwan’s largest opposition party, the Kuomintang (KMT). In this far-ranging interview, she discusses her vision for peace and cooperation between Taiwan and mainland China, her meeting in April with Communist Party chief Xi Jinping and her coming trip to the United States in June. The original interview was conducted in Chinese. SCMP Plus members can read a Chinese version of the transcript here. For other interviews in the Open Questions series, click...

Why the UAE’s Opec exit spells the beginning of the end of Gulf unity
Industry

Why the UAE’s Opec exit spells the beginning of the end of Gulf unity

The fighting over oil production quotas was the symptom. Security realignment is the disease The Opec exit made visible what the shift had made possible. Security architecture, not quota arithmetic, is what holds a cartel together. Opec has always been a political institution. The standard account of Opec is that it is a production cartel coordinating output to protect revenue. That is technically accurate and analytically insufficient. Its founding logic was sovereign solidarity, the assertion by post-colonial states that they would collectively control a resource the West had long treated as its own. That required a shared threat environment, a sense that members needed each other because the alternative was exposure. For 50 years, Gulf states had that. The fiscal asymmetry deepens the rupture and makes it permanent. The UAE’s fiscal break-even oil price sits below US$50 per barrel. Saudi Arabia’s exceeds US$90. These are not negotiating positions. They are incompatible survival strategies.

Chinese transcript of SCMP’s interview with KMT’s Cheng Li-wun
Industry

Chinese transcript of SCMP’s interview with KMT’s Cheng Li-wun

Cheng Li-wun is the chairwoman of Taiwan’s largest opposition party, the Kuomintang (KMT). In this wide-ranging interview, she discusses her vision for peace and cooperation between Taiwan and mainland China, her meeting in April with Communist Party chief Xi Jinping and her upcoming trip to the United States in June. The original interview was conducted in Chinese. SCMP Plus members can access the Chinese transcript. Chinese transcript: interview with KMT’s Cheng Li-wun by scmp