Two incoming passengers convicted and jailed for importing/possessing duty-not-paid cigarettes
Two incoming female passengers were sentenced to three months' imprisonment with a fine of $1,000, and six weeks' imprisonment with a fine of $2,000, respectively, by the Fanling Magistrates Courts today (June 23) for importing or possessing duty-not-paid cigarettes and failing to declare to Customs officers, in contravention of the Dutiable Commodities Ordinance (DCO).
Customs officers intercepted an incoming 43-year-old Chinese female passenger at the Lok Ma Chau Spur Line Control Point on April 19 and seized 13 800 duty-not-paid cigarettes from her personal baggage, with an estimated market value of about $59,000 and a duty potential of about $46,000. She was subsequently arrested. She was sentenced to three months' imprisonment with a fine of $1,000 by the Courts today.
In addition, Customs officers intercepted an incoming 49-year-old local female passenger at the Lo Wu Control Point on May 21 and seized 981 duty-not-paid cigarettes from her personal baggage, with an estimated market value of about $4,000 and a duty potential of about $3,000. She was subsequently arrested and released on bail. Customs officers intercepted the female passenger again at the Lok Ma Chau Spur Line Control Point on June 6 and seized 1 261 duty-not-paid cigarettes from her personal baggage, with an estimated market value of about $5,000 and a duty potential of about $4,000. She was subsequently arrested and was sentenced to six weeks' imprisonment with a fine of $2,000 by the Courts today.
Customs welcomes the sentences, noting that even a first-time offender may still be imprisoned. The custodial sentences have imposed a considerable deterrent effect and reflect the seriousness of the offences. Members of the public should not defy the law.
Customs reminds members of the public that under the DCO, cigarettes are dutiable goods to which the DCO applies. Any person who imports, deals with, possesses, sells or buys illicit cigarettes commits an offence. The maximum penalty upon conviction is a fine of $2 million and imprisonment for seven years.
Members of the public may report any suspected illicit cigarette activities to Customs' 24-hour hotline 182 8080 or its dedicated crime-reporting email account (crimereport@customs.gov.hk) or online form (eform.cefs.gov.hk/form/ced002).
Two incoming female passengers were sentenced to three months' imprisonment with a fine of $1,000, and six weeks' imprisonment with a fine of $2,000, respectively, by the Fanling Magistrates Courts today (June 23) for importing or possessing duty-not-paid cigarettes and failing to declare to Customs officers, in contravention of the Dutiable Commodities Ordinance. Photo shows the duty-not-paid cigarettes seized by Customs officers from the personal baggage of an incoming 49-year-old local female passenger in the second interception. Source: HKSAR Government Press Releases
Two incoming female passengers were sentenced to three months' imprisonment with a fine of $1,000, and six weeks' imprisonment with a fine of $2,000, respectively, by the Fanling Magistrates Courts today (June 23) for importing or possessing duty-not-paid cigarettes and failing to declare to Customs officers, in contravention of the Dutiable Commodities Ordinance. Photo shows the duty-not-paid cigarettes seized by Customs officers from the personal baggage of an incoming 49-year-old local female passenger in the first interception. Source: HKSAR Government Press Releases
Two incoming female passengers were sentenced to three months' imprisonment with a fine of $1,000, and six weeks' imprisonment with a fine of $2,000, respectively, by the Fanling Magistrates Courts today (June 23) for importing or possessing duty-not-paid cigarettes and failing to declare to Customs officers, in contravention of the Dutiable Commodities Ordinance. Photo shows the duty-not-paid cigarettes seized from the personal baggage of an incoming 43-year-old Chinese female passenger. Source: HKSAR Government Press Releases
InvestHK leads first dedicated new energy and sustainability delegation to UK to drive bilateral green investment
Invest Hong Kong (InvestHK) led its first New Energy and Sustainability Mission to the United Kingdom (UK) from June 16 to 24 (London time), co-organised with the UK's Department for Business and Trade, to champion Hong Kong as the premier launch pad for Hong Kong and Chinese Mainland green tech companies going global, while attracting UK clean tech firms and investors to the city.
Led by the Global Head of Financial Services, Fintech and Sustainability of InvestHK, Mr King Leung, and accompanied by the Senior Vice President (Sustainability) for Technology, Innovation and Entrepreneurship of InvestHK, Ms Olivia To, the delegation represented the full breadth of Hong Kong's new energy and green tech ecosystem, bringing together 25 companies - spanning listed, pre-IPO (initial public offering) and start-up businesses alongside active investors. Backed by two ecosystem partners, namely the Hong Kong Science and Technology Parks Corporation and the Hong Kong Trade Development Council, this assembly brought together deep expertise across areas such as battery and energy storage, renewable energy and hydrogen, smart electric vehicle infrastructure, new materials and AI. The Director-General of the Hong Kong Economic and Trade Office in London (London ETO), Miss Fiona Chau, also participated in part of the delegation's visit.
In Scotland, delegates explored the UK's energy transition at scale, with the itinerary deliberately tracing the journey from heavy industry decarbonisation to next-generation clean energy. Visits to major green industrial clusters and Forth Green Freeport sites in the Edinburgh and Aberdeen areas - the heart of the UK's pivot from North Sea oil and gas to clean energy and hydrogen - offered a live case study in cluster reinvention potentially relevant to Hong Kong and the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area (GBA), while engagements with the representatives from the University of Edinburgh and the City of Edinburgh Council opened strategic dialogues on offshore wind, hydrogen and carbon capture.
The delegation timed its London leg to coincide with London Climate Action Week, one of the largest gatherings of its kind globally and a magnet for the policymakers, investors and innovators shaping the net-zero agenda. At Reset Connect London - the UK's premier sustainability and green investment event - representatives from four companies scaling operations across bilateral markets took to the stage to profile Hong Kong's green tech credentials and their own solutions before an international audience of capital allocators. These companies and investors are now planning to scale up their investments and project rollouts in both Hong Kong and the UK. The delegation also attended the Octopus Energy Tech Summit and met with their China market representatives to explore collaboration.
InvestHK also cohosted networking receptions in Edinburgh and London on June 19 and 23 respectively, alongside the London ETO. Attended by delegates, local partners, and industry stakeholders, these initiatives aimed to turn the connections built during the tour into practical and productive opportunities.
Mr Leung said, "As both economies pivot toward net zero, the synergistic alignment between Hong Kong and the UK has never been clearer. Hong Kong and London are the world's pre-eminent green finance centre, and Hong Kong is Asia's ultimate 'super connector', uniquely bridging the Chinese Mainland green tech enterprises with global markets under the 'one country, two systems' framework. This mission is the practical infrastructure of that bridge, connecting patient capital, technology partners and corporate buyers to drive real commercial outcomes, and demonstrating how Hong Kong serves as the launch pad for companies scaling into the US$2 trillion GBA and the wider region."
The Head of Business and Talent Attraction/Investment Promotion of the InvestHK London Office, Ms Daisy Ip, added, "This mission highlights InvestHK's evolving role, from attracting capital, talent and standards into Hong Kong to actively supporting companies as they go global. Our delegates raised their profile alongside the InvestHK team at the UK's leading sustainability forums, while UK clean tech firms, investors and research institutions saw first-hand the strength of Hong Kong's green finance and innovation ecosystem. Through InvestHK's extensive global network, we are committed to facilitating these two-way opportunities."
The Director General for Trade and Investment, British Consulate General Hong Kong, Mr Chris Woodward, said, "Few partnerships are as complementary as the UK and Hong Kong on the net-zero transition. Britain's strengths in offshore wind, hydrogen and carbon capture are matched by Hong Kong's unrivalled ability to mobilise capital and open doors across the GBA and Asia. That is what makes this delegation so valuable. It puts UK clean tech firms, investors and researchers directly in front of the companies and capital that can scale British innovation regionally. We were delighted to cohost a mission that turns shared climate ambition into tangible commercial outcomes."
The Director of Europe at RelyEZ, Ms Michelle Cross, said, "As a global integrated energy service provider spanning project development, proprietary R&D (research and development), and equipment manufacturing, the company has deployed over 200 global projects worldwide, with a total storage capacity of 13 GWh to date. We see Hong Kong as the natural bridge between Chinese energy-storage capabilities and international markets. We are building the city into our global financing headquarters and the platform through which international capital can access high-quality energy transition assets worldwide - drawing on its capital markets, professional expertise and connectivity to the GBA. This mission demonstrates how that ecosystem can connect directly with UK and European partners, capital and policymakers to turn shared ambition into lasting partnerships."
InvestHK remains at the forefront of cementing Hong Kong's status as Asia's pre-eminent hub for green technology and sustainable finance. By driving targeted initiatives like the Energy and Sustainability Mission, the department acts as a critical catalyst, connecting UK clean tech innovators, investors, and research institutions into Hong Kong's dynamic ecosystem, while empowering Mainland and local enterprises to scale globally. Backed by a robust financial architecture, world-class universities for R&Ds and professional services, and seamless connectivity to the US$2 trillion GBA and broader Asian markets, Hong Kong continues to reinforce its position as a unique launch pad for cross-border sustainability collaboration and commercial growth.
InvestHK leads first dedicated new energy and sustainability delegation to UK to drive bilateral green investment Source: HKSAR Government Press Releases
InvestHK leads first dedicated new energy and sustainability delegation to UK to drive bilateral green investment Source: HKSAR Government Press Releases
InvestHK leads first dedicated new energy and sustainability delegation to UK to drive bilateral green investment Source: HKSAR Government Press Releases
InvestHK leads first dedicated new energy and sustainability delegation to UK to drive bilateral green investment Source: HKSAR Government Press Releases