Good morning.
Are there any Bojack Horseman fans who read High Tide? If so, youâll appreciate this edit that someone on Reddit put together of that thing that happened between Will Smith and Chris Rock during the Oscars.
Anyways, we have fun here. Let your friends know what theyâre missing out on.


â Jasmine Lee
On Todayâs Tide
Society | $100 for the homeless who lost belongings that authorities unfairly disposed of.
COVID-19 | Fines more than double for pandemic rule breakers.
Events | Get Jazzy this April!
Behind the paywall:
Health | Suicide in Hong Kong at âcrisisâ level. Also, participate in a Hospital Authority conference.
Religion | Kowloon Mosque hopes to reopen before the end of Ramadan.
Economy | Itâs getting even more expensive to keep the lights on.
Crime | âLong-Hairâ Leung gets jail sentence for folder snatching incident.
Appointments | The PLA garrison appoints a new political commissar. HKEX Singapore announces a new senior employee.
Winning lawsuit gets homeless HK$100 each
Society

A group of homeless people have won a lawsuit against the government over an incident in December 2019 that involved riot police and other authorities removing their belongings during a clearance operation. According to the case, authorities gave the homeless people living in Tung Chau Street Park in Sham Shui Po three minutes to collect their things and clear the area. The people who werenât present at the time, for obvious reasons, were unable to do so and their belongings were thrown away.
The judge ordered the Leisure and Cultural Services Department, whose staff were responsible for the poor handling of the clearance operation, to give each claimant $100 in damages. One of the nine claimants has actually passed away due to COVID-19, but Iâm not sure if that means that the LCSD now owe $100 less or if that will be distributed out another way.
Questions to consider: Does $100 cover the cost of what was lost? Both in material and sentimental (if any) value? $100 is only like four of the afternoon meal specials from Nam Gee so I donât know how far $100 will go for people who are literally unhoused.
Higher fines for pandemic rule breakers
COVID-19
Punishment for those who breach compulsory quarantining and testing orders will be slapped with a $25,000 fine and a six-month jail sentence if theyâre found out â this is more than double the current $10,000 fine! These new rules will come into effect on Thursday, but we know our High Tide readers donât have to worry about it because weâre law-abiding citizens. Right?


COVID-19 in Hong Kong
New cases: 7,596 (3,164 PCR tests, 4,432 RATs)
Total cases: > 1.13 million
Deaths: 149
Lockdown updates
107 cases were found after overnight lockdowns at three buildings (Cheung Chi House of Cheung Wah Estate in Fanling, Kwong Yan House of Kwong Fuk Estate in Tai Po, Chung Shue House of Lei Muk Shue (II) Estate in Tsuen Wan)
Four more buildings were put into overnight lockdown:
They are blocks 7 and 8 of Richland Gardens in Kowloon Bay; Block 6 of Dawning Views in Fanling; and Ching Yeung House of Cheung Ching Estate in Tsing Yi.
â RTHK
Other COVID-19 updates
The government is beginning to provide home vaccination services of the Sinovac jab for those in need, including elderly and disabled residents.
Seven mainland Chinese medicine experts have come to Hong Kong to assist with the management and treatment of the cityâs epidemic.
Elderly care homes are encouraged to improve their ventilation by joining a government scheme that would help lower the chances of infection spreading.
Parents will not be torn from their COVID-infected children anymore regardless of the parentsâ COVID status, a Hospital Authority official reports.
A biotech company has created a digital platform â the Antigen Rapid Test Quantitative System â that tells COVID patients how high their viral load is from the comfort of their homes/quarantine rooms.
Over 70% of teachers in Hong Kong think relaunching in person classes by 19 April is a bad idea, according to a survey by the Hong Kong Federation of Education Workers (pro-establishment educators group).
Mandatory testing is required for people who have been at 20 specified locations during the given time period (see Annex for details).
Events and deals
Support Harbour Times, our friends and partners by attending these events! Let everyone know who sent you by tagging @harbourtimes
Get into the groove with Hong Kongâs finest musicians
In the mood for a little swing? Tune in to Innonation Hong Kongâs âJazz Thursday Explorations 2â, an upcoming live-streamed performance set to feature a string of local jazz artists, from Hong Kong-based saxophonist Scott Murphy to multi-discipline musician Justin Siu.
When: 7th April, 9:30 p.m.
Details: Watch the live broadcast of performances here
"A Woman's Worldâ: Asia's first virtual exhibition highlighting NFTs
In celebration of International Womenâs Day and Womenâs History Month, be sure to join our previous LoTW Sharmaine Kwan with Bamboo Scenesâ exciting new online NFT exhibition honoring local female artists exploring the endless possibilities of the Metaverse.
When: From 24th March, 2:00 p.m. onwards
Where: Access the virtual exhibition by clicking here
10% off the Cellar: La Cabane x Harbour Times
Our friends over at La Cabane have kindly given all High Tide subscribers 10% off everything on their online store - high quality wines, cheeses and wines-and-cheeses accessories.
Want your events on Tide as well? Let us know!
This is the end of your free time on Tide.
Become a Premium subscriber to see what lies behind the paywall:
Canât go Premium yet? No worries, there are other ways to support High Tide:
Keep reading with a 7-day free trial
Subscribe to High Tide to keep reading this post and get 7 days of free access to the full post archives.