Attempted murder and suicide in Kwun Tong

     Police are investigating an attempted murder and suicide case in Kwun Tong this afternoon (July 24) in which a 35-year-old woman died and her two-year-old son was seriously injured.
 
     At about 2.50pm, Police received multiple reports that a woman and a boy fell from height at Wah Tong House, Yau Tong Estate.

     Police officers sped to the scene, and found the 35-year-old woman and the two-year-old boy lying unconsciously outside the above location. The woman and the boy were rushed to United Christian Hospital and Queen Elizabeth Hospital respectively. The woman was certified dead at 3.24pm.

     Initial investigation revealed that cut wounds were found on the neck and both hands of the woman.

     Three knives in suspected connection with the case were found inside a unit at the above location.

     Post-mortem examinations will be conducted to ascertain the cause of the deceased.
 
     Active investigation by the District Crime Squad of Kwun Tong District is underway.




Attempted murder and suicide in Kwun Tong

     Police are investigating an attempted murder and suicide case in Kwun Tong this afternoon (July 24) in which a 35-year-old woman died and her two-year-old son was seriously injured.
 
     At about 2.50pm, Police received multiple reports that a woman and a boy fell from height at Wah Tong House, Yau Tong Estate.

     Police officers sped to the scene, and found the 35-year-old woman and the two-year-old boy lying unconsciously outside the above location. The woman and the boy were rushed to United Christian Hospital and Queen Elizabeth Hospital respectively. The woman was certified dead at 3.24pm.

     Initial investigation revealed that cut wounds were found on the neck and both hands of the woman.

     Three knives in suspected connection with the case were found inside a unit at the above location.

     Post-mortem examinations will be conducted to ascertain the cause of the deceased.
 
     Active investigation by the District Crime Squad of Kwun Tong District is underway.




Vegetable stall in Tai Po operated by Bonnie Vegetables and Fruit Wholesale Limited convicted for causing noise nuisance

     â€‹A vegetable chain stall, operated by Bonnie Vegetables and Fruit Wholesale Limited at Kwong Fuk Road in Tai Po, caused noise nuisance by playing promotional recordings loudly and continuously to peddle goods. It was fined a total of $14,000 by Fanling Magistrates' Courts today (July 24) for contravening the Noise Control Ordinance (NCO).
      
     An Environmental Protection Department (EPD) spokesman said that from early this year, the department received many complaints from members of the public about a vegetable stall at Kwong Fuk Road in Tai Po persistently playing promotional recordings during operating hours to sell goods by using loudspeakers, which adversely affected nearby residents. The EPD conducted enforcement operations against the vegetable stall concerned on February 3 and February 8 this year. Upon on-site assessment by EPD staff, it was confirmed that the noise caused annoyance and the department subsequently prosecuted the vegetable stall under the NCO.
      
     After a series of enforcement actions, the noise level of the above vegetable stall has improved. The EPD will continue to closely monitor the situation. Criminal prosecution against the director of the operating company may be considered if repeated contravention by the stall is detected.
      
     The spokesman reminded persons responsible for retail shops and market stalls that when they play promotional recordings to sell goods, they should contain the noise level within their shop area and should not cause annoyance to other people outside their shops or nearby residents. Otherwise, it constitutes an offence, and offenders are liable to a maximum fine of $10,000. For stores with repeated contraventions, the operator himself will also be criminally liable for the offence once convicted.




SED to visit Huizhou

     The Secretary for Education, Mr Kevin Yeung, will leave Hong Kong in the morning on July 26 (Thursday) for an official visit to Huizhou, Guangdong Province.
      
     Huizhou is one of the cities in the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Bay Area. Mr Yeung will meet with education officials of the Guangdong Provincial Government and the Huizhou Municipal Government on co-operation opportunities in education. He will also visit other cities in the Bay Area in the future.
      
     Mr Yeung will return to Hong Kong in the afternoon on the same day.




Woman fined for operating unlicensed guesthouse

     A woman was fined $10,000 at the Eastern Magistrates' Courts today (July 24) for contravening the Hotel and Guesthouse Accommodation Ordinance.
           
     The courts heard that in December last year, officers of the Office of the Licensing Authority (OLA), Home Affairs Department, inspected a suspected unlicensed guesthouse on Chun Yeung Street in North Point. The OLA officers posed as lodgers and successfully rented a room in the guesthouse on a daily basis.
           
     According to the OLA's records, the guesthouse did not possess a licence under the Ordinance on the day of inspection. The woman responsible for operating the premises was charged with contravening section 5(1) of the Ordinance.
           
     A department spokesman stressed that operating or managing an unlicensed guesthouse is a criminal offence and will lead to a criminal record. Upon conviction, the offender is liable to a maximum fine of $200,000 and two years' imprisonment.
           
     The spokesman appealed to anyone with information about suspected unlicensed guesthouses to report it to the OLA through the hotline (Tel: 2881 7498), by email (hadlaenq@had.gov.hk), by fax (2504 5805) using the report form downloaded from the OLA website (www.hadla.gov.hk), or through the mobile application "Hong Kong Licensed Hotels and Guesthouses".