A senior Hong Kong official has resigned after attending a karaoke birthday bash in violation of the city’s tough “zero-Covid” guidelines, embarrassing the government of Carrie Lam as it was seeking to burnish its credentials with Beijing.
Caspar Tsui, Hong Kong’s home affairs secretary, attended the party alongside 14 other top officials including the police and immigration chiefs as well as pro-Beijing lawmakers in spite of a new Omicron outbreak in the city.
Days after news of the party emerged, new lawmakers selected under Beijing’s “patriots-only” overhaul of the political system held their first meeting but some were unable to attend as they were quarantined owing to the festivities. The reforms weeded out almost all pro-democracy opposition candidates from the legislature.
Meanwhile, UK prime minister Boris Johnson rejected calls to resign yesterday after Sue Gray, a senior civil servant, published a long-awaited and highly critical report on lockdown-breaching parties across Whitehall.
Gray’s report was heavily rewritten before publication, at the request of the Metropolitan Police, excising criticism over the most serious allegations of Covid lockdown-breaching parties. But even in its watered-down form, the report was scathing about “failures of leadership and judgment” in Number 10 and the Cabinet Office.
Further reading:
Explainer: The five things you need to know about the partygate report
Timeline: Our list of when UK government social gatherings were held during Covid
What’s your reaction to Caspar Tsui’s resignation? And calls for Boris Johnson to step down? Share your thoughts at firstft@ft.com. Thanks for reading FirstFT Asia. — Emily
Five more stories in the news
1. US plans sanctions against Putin’s inner circle The US has drawn up sanctions targeting Vladimir Putin’s inner circle and its ties to the west as Washington broadens the list of financial penalties it and European allies will impose if Russia invades Ukraine.
More Russia-Ukraine conflict news: Russia launched a blistering attack on the US for “whipping up hysteria” over a potential invasion of Ukraine amid repeated warnings from Washington that Vladimir Putin is preparing to attack.
2. Sony buys video game maker Bungie for $3.6bn In a wave of consolidation that has swept the gaming sector this month, the PlayStation owner has acquired the company behind the Halo franchise. The deal comes less than two weeks after Xbox maker Microsoft agreed to buy video game developer Activision Blizzard for $75bn.
3. Ex-BNP banker wins £2m payout for gender discrimination In one of the largest awards made by a UK employment tribunal, Stacey Macken is to receive £2m in compensation after BNP paid her significantly less than male colleagues over a four-year tenure at the bank’s London office.
4. Thailand axes planned 15% cryptocurrency tax The south-east Asian nation has scrapped plans to impose a 15 per cent withholding tax on crypto transactions after facing pushback from traders in one of the region’s biggest markets for digital currencies.
Related read: Sharp price swings in cryptocurrencies are causing “destabilising” capital flows in emerging markets, a senior IMF official has warned.
5. Chinese ski hub buried in debt after Olympics building spree Chongli county, one of the three hubs for the Beijing Winter Olympics, is facing severe financial problems after embarking on a debt-fuelled investment spree to prepare for the Games.
Coronavirus digest
The BA. 2 offshoot of the Omicron variant is more infectious and better at evading immune protection provided by vaccines than the original version, according to a Danish study.
Almost half of US Covid-19 hospitalisations this winter could have been avoided if it had matched vaccination coverage in leading European countries, an FT analysis has found.
Spotify is adding content advisory warnings to podcasts that discuss Covid-19 as the streaming service responds to a backlash against its popular presenter Joe Rogan.
Winners are emerging in corporate America’s response to the supply chain crisis following a wave of spending on capacity and support for weaker vendors.
Opinion: Covid has revealed the limits of the state in controlling or understanding a powerful force of nature, writes Ruchir Sharma.
The days ahead
Lunar New Year The Hong Kong stock exchange is closed for the lunar new year break. It reopens on Friday. Chinese technology stocks gained in an abridged trading session yesterday.
Reserve Bank of Australia The central bank will hold its monthly meeting, where a hawkish tone is expected amid soaring inflation.
India Union Budget The country’s Union Budget is set to be announced today, one day after the 2021-2022 Economic Survey was released. (Economic Times)
Earnings Alphabet, ExxonMobil, General Motors, Lundin Energy, Starbucks, Tele2, and UPS will report earnings.
What else we’re reading
Automation exacts a toll in inequality When humans compete with machines, wages go down and jobs go away. But in recent decades, something in this relationship began to break down. GDP growth in the US has slowed and inequality has risen. Rana Foroohar examines why.
Air taxis: fantasy or realistic promise? Flying cars made a giant swoop forward in the past year, with a crowd of start-ups raising more than double the amount over the previous decade on the promise of making “urban air mobility” a reality. But will the exuberance evaporate?
Nestlé’s move to clean up the chocolate trade The food company has plans to triple its cocoa sustainability funding and make direct payouts to African cocoa farmers in a bid to remove child labour from its supply chain. There are at least three key points that the wider — non-chocolate — business world should note, Gillian Tett writes in our Moral Money newsletter. Sign up here.
Pakistan start-up looks to break taboos around menstruation Many women in Pakistan remain uninformed about periods. Instead of treating menstruation as a matter of shame, the social media-based project Aurat Raaj is spreading the message that periods are healthcare matter.
The paradox that leads professionals into temptation The greater a manager’s sense of professionalism, the more likely they are to accept a gift or bribe, argues Andrew Hill. Worse, high-minded professionals may be more susceptible to unconscious bias towards gift-givers because they are convinced they know how to ignore their blandishments.
Fashion
Whether outdoor swimming, running or kick-boxing — the FT fashion team share their tried and tested activewear tips for the best cold-weather workout gear.
Source: Economy - ft.com