US academic Li Shaomin (李少民), convicted in Beijing of spying and expelled, wants to return to his university post in Hong Kong, setting the stage for a major test of the territory's promised autonomy under Chinese rule.
In an interview with Hong Kong's Sunday Morning Post newspaper, Li said he wanted to return to life where he left off before his arrest in southern China in February.
"If there is one central theme running through my mind after all of this, it is that I just want to return to live a normal life in Hong Kong," he was quoted as saying.
Li flew to the US after being expelled last week and was interviewed by the Post in Washington. "My father is in Hong Kong, my home is in Hong Kong. I want to sleep in my own bed," he said. "I want my daughter to go to her school. I see no reason why I should not be able to settle back to a normal existence after all of this."
It may not be so easy.
His return to Hong Kong, reunited with China in 1997 after 150 years of British rule, poses a major test of the territory's autonomy within communist China.
United under a "one country, two systems" formula, Hong Kong got to keep its capitalist economy and British Common Law tradition for 50 years, but Beijing controls all foreign and defense policy.
Views are mixed on how the "one country, two systems" formula applies in this case. The legal systems are separate so Li's conviction may not count in Hong Kong but he was convicted of spying on one country, which includes China and Hong Kong.
Li maintained his innocence at his trial and denies China's allegation that he confessed to spying for Taiwan.
"I am innocent. I am not a spy. I don't need to explain it any more than that," Li, a marketing professor at Hong Kong's City University, told the Post.
Many of his colleagues have said they expect him to slip back smoothly into his post but pro-Beijing politicians in Hong Kong have been much less welcoming. They have said Li was expelled from China, and that includes Hong Kong, and at the very least Hong Kong should seek Beijing's permission before letting Li return.
So far Beijing's handpicked Hong Kong leader, Tung Chee-hwa (
DEMOGRAPHICS: Robotics is the most promising answer to looming labor woes, the long-term care system and national contingency response, an official said Taiwan is to launch a five-year plan to boost the robotics industry in a bid to address labor shortages stemming from a declining and aging population, the Executive Yuan said yesterday. The government approved the initiative, dubbed the Smart Robotics Industry Promotion Plan, via executive order, senior officials told a post-Cabinet meeting news conference in Taipei. Taiwan’s population decline would strain the economy and the nation’s ability to care for vulnerable and elderly people, said Peter Hong (洪樂文), who heads the National Science and Technology Council’s (NSTC) Department of Engineering and Technologies. Projections show that the proportion of Taiwanese 65 or older would
Nvidia Corp yesterday unveiled its new high-speed interconnect technology, NVLink Fusion, with Taiwanese application-specific IC (ASIC) designers Alchip Technologies Ltd (世芯) and MediaTek Inc (聯發科) among the first to adopt the technology to help build semi-custom artificial intelligence (AI) infrastructure for hyperscalers. Nvidia has opened its technology to outside users, as hyperscalers and cloud service providers are building their own cost-effective AI chips, or accelerators, used in AI servers by leveraging ASIC firms’ designing capabilities to reduce their dependence on Nvidia. Previously, NVLink technology was only available for Nvidia’s own AI platform. “NVLink Fusion opens Nvidia’s AI platform and rich ecosystem for
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電) yesterday said it is building nine new advanced wafer manufacturing and packaging factories this year, accelerating its expansion amid strong demand for high-performance computing (HPC) and artificial intelligence (AI) applications. The chipmaker built on average five factories per year from 2021 to last year and three from 2017 to 2020, TSMC vice president of advanced technology and mask engineering T.S. Chang (張宗生) said at the company’s annual technology symposium in Hsinchu City. “We are quickening our pace even faster in 2025. We plan to build nine new factories, including eight wafer fabrication plants and one advanced
‘WORLD’S LOSS’: Taiwan’s exclusion robs the world of the benefits it could get from one of the foremost practitioners of disease prevention and public health, Minister Chiu said Taiwan should be allowed to join the World Health Assembly (WHA) as an irreplaceable contributor to global health and disease prevention efforts, Minister of Foreign Affairs Lin Chia-lung (林佳龍) said yesterday. He made the comment at a news conference in Taipei, hours before a Taiwanese delegation was to depart for Geneva, Switzerland, seeking to meet with foreign representatives for a bilateral meeting on the sidelines of the WHA, the WHO’s annual decisionmaking meeting, which would be held from Monday next week to May 27. As of yesterday, Taiwan had yet to receive an invitation. Taiwan has much to offer to the international community’s