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    #Hashtag Hong Kong

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    Listen to #Hashtag Hong Kong every Sunday morning at 8.15

    Focussing on issues affecting civil society, we'll hear from representatives of NGOs, associations, statutory bodies, and non-profit groups.

    (Sundays 8.15am - 8.25am)



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    Dr. Chris Yiu - director of the SLCO Community Resources
    20/04/2025
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    Dr. Chris Yiu - Director of the SLCO Community Resources

    Good morning. A movie titled "The Way We Talk" has brought people's attention to the needs of the local deaf community in Hong Kong. SLCO had begun supporting its production ten years ago. This is a first ever movie that has invited a large group of deaf people participating in the production, including its pre-production research, sign language training and supervision, and actors. It has reflected a wide range of genuine life experience of deaf people.

    What makes "The Way We Talk" so touching to me is that the three main characters, despite their different upbringings, attitudes, choices, and pathways, come to respect and acceptance with each other, and become close friends. This concept of 'harmony in diversity' and inclusiveness is indeed rarely observed but invaluable in contemporary society.

    However, throughout history, there have been many disputes and debates within the deaf community regarding sign language versus spoken language in education. These disagreements have led to significant divisions and even opposition among deaf people-It seems like a deaf person can either speak or sign.

    I vividly remember a deaf student of mine who grew up with no sign language cried to me when he noticed that I was dedicated to re-introduce sign language learning in deaf education. Just like some parents and professionals, the student was strongly against sign language and believed that sign language learning would make deaf people dumb and consequently take away their opportunities to be ‘normal'. He attributed this as a betrayal of oral education that he wholeheartedly believed.

    On the other hand, some deaf people using sign language feel that they were looked down upon by teachers when they were students because they could not speak well, while those who spoke well were always given a higher status in schools.

    There is a long-standing misconception that no sign language learning should be given to deaf children with hearing aids or cochlear implants, but in fact, hearing instruments cannot bring normal hearing back to deaf people. Learning one more language, no matter if it is a sign or spoken language, can be a necessity or simply a personal choice for deaf people.The two languages are not mutually exclusive. It is their right to choose a language that suits them best, not to mention that sign language is the only language with no barriers to deaf people.

    The scene in the movie that left the deepest impression on me is when Wolf suddenly realized that he would never been eligible to obtain a diving coach license just because he cannot hear. His emotional reaction was heartbreaking but also painfully real.

    Speaking and hearing ability is just a small part of a person, yet society's biased view has neglected the potential of deaf people who rely on sign language and taken away their many opportunities to excel themselves. Suppressing this group of deaf people pushes them to the margins and leaves them isolated from society and even their families.

    Self identity has always been a significant life challenge for many deaf people: Who am I? Am I deaf, hearing, or neither? Sadly,there have been deaf students of mine experienced severe emotional distress or even committed suicide because they were marginalized in the

    society. They could not find their place in schools and families, to an extent that they continually rejected their own value and could not find reasons to love themselves.

    Research tells us people with a bilingual bicultural identity possess a more positive self esteem since they do not have to force themselves to be a ‘normal' person or else a ‘person with disability’. The bilingual identity allows them to immerse themselves in both the deaf and hearing community and enjoy the friendships with both groups of persons with no restrictions. With this regard, the more sign bilingual talents we cultivate,the more communication bridges that are built to connect the deaf and hearing worlds.

    20/04/2025 - 足本 Full (HKT 08:15 - 08:30)

    重溫

    CATCHUP
    02 - 04
    2025
    香港電台第三台

    20/04/2025

    Dr. Chris Yiu - director of the SLCO Community Resources

    13/04/2025

    Christina Y W Chua - Co-Founder & Chief Executive Officer at The CEO Foundation

    06/04/2025

    Daniel Lai - Programme Director of the Hong Kong Jockey Club Financial Education Programme

    30/03/2025

    Deanna Kwok - Head of Programmes at Love21 Foundation

    23/03/2025

    Dr. Angie Fong - specialist in Ophthalmology, and Council Member of The Hong Kong Ophthalmological Society

    16/03/2025

    Abi Tannis Porter, founder of the charity A Little Bit Extra

    09/03/2025

    Inès Gafsi - Inspiring Girls Hong Kong

    02/03/2025

    Grace Chan, Art Therapist at the Providence Garden for Rehab, The Hong Kong Sheng Kung Hui Welfare Council

    23/02/2025

    Dr. Kelvin Ho, the Founding President of Hong Kong Organ Transplant Foundation

    16/02/2025

    Tom Ng, a Climate Campaigner at Greenpeace
    X

    Dr Cheng Luk Ki, Director of Green Power

    Spring is hot and deadly this year

    The Hong Kong Observatory has reported that high temperatures in April this year are record-breaking. Concurrently, Southeast Asia also experienced historically high temperatures in April this year due to the strong El Niño phenomenon. Many Southeast Asian cities recorded temperatures exceeding 40 degrees Celsius. Even located at a higher latitude, Japan’s average temperature last April was the highest in nearly 130 years.

     

    The temperature in Hong Kong in April has not always risen significantly in the past. The abnormal temperature increase in April this year may tell us that climate change is precisely changing Hong Kong's seasonal climate.

     

    This year, the weather in Hong Kong continued to be rainy since mid-April, making everyone ignore that this April was about to set a historic abnormal temperature record. Under the joint impact of climate change and El Niño, Hong Kong recorded exceptionally high temperatures in April:

     

    the mean maximum temperature was 28.9 degrees, 3.3 degrees higher than the average value and 1.4 degrees higher than the previous highest value (in 1994);

    the mean temperature was 26.4 degrees Celsius, 3.4 degrees higher than the average value and 1.6 degrees higher than the previous highest value (in 1998);

    the mean minimum temperature was 24.6 degrees Celsius, 3.5 degrees higher than the average and 1.7 degrees higher than the previous highest value (in 1998).

     

    Moreover, these temperatures on most days throughout the last April were above the average.

     

    If we look into the figures of the top records of April temperature rankings in the past, we will find that the difference between two consecutive rankings is mostly within 0.1 degrees Celsius, and rarely more than 0.5 degrees Celsius.

    However, the monthly mean maximum, mean and mean minimum temperatures in April this year are 1.4, 1.6 and 1.6 degrees higher than the previous highest records. The temperatures of April 2024 were unprecedently far higher.

     

    April is usually the hottest month in mainland Southeast Asia such as Vietnam, Thailand and Malaysia. Extreme high temperatures will happen in this month when the intensity of El Niño in previous winter is high. The meteorologists call these Aprils “post-Nino” Aprils and this situation has been worsened by global warming in recent years.

     

    The last time extremely high temperatures occurred in mainland Southeast Asia was in April 2016, and that year there was also a strong El Niño phenomenon that occurred in the previous winter.

     

    However, unlike mainland Southeast Asia, Hong Kong did not use to record unusually high temperatures in April during El Niño years such as 2016. Although Hong Kong did not experience extremely hot weather in April this year, the abnormally high-temperature record may imply that the “post-Nino” Aprils phenomenon is extending from mainland Southeast Asia to southern China, and causing Hong Kong's summer to start earlier.

     

    Hong Kong’s “Post-Nino” April this year also shows that climate change can significantly change the weather of a certain month which will be exacerbated under the influence of climatic cycles such as El Niño.

     

    Hot weather can be deadly. Heat-related death cases increased throughout Southeast Asia countries in this spring season. In Hong Kong, according to the results of a local hot weather-related mortality study conducted by the Chinese University of Hong Kong, when the local average daily temperature exceeds 28.2 degrees Celsius, the mortality rate will increase by 1.8% for every 1-degree increase.

     

    Checking the data of the Hong Kong Observatory, the number of high-temperature days (i.e. the daily mean temperature exceeds 28.2 degrees Celsius) increased from some 70 days to more than 100 days from 2000 to 2023. According to the study, the risk of death related to high-temperature weather in Hong Kong has increased significantly by 1.5 times over the past two decades.

     

    Looking into the future, according to projections by the Hong Kong Observatory based on data from various global climate models of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), Hong Kong's annual mean temperature will range from 24.6 to 27.1 degrees Celsius by the end of this century. Then, the number of deaths triggered by high temperatures will increase by 55 to 554 cases compared with 2022. The situation cannot be ignored.

     

    Environmental Protection Department’s research report on assessing the health and economic impacts of air pollution in Hong Kong set the “Value of Statistical Life (VSL)” at HK$20 million (2022 value). Based on this figure, by the end of this century, the economic loss due to death caused by high-temperature weather in Hong Kong due to climate change will range from HK$1.11 billion to HK$11.08 billion.

     

    We can expect that Hong Kong’s high-temperature weather is likely to extend beyond summer in the future. We have checked the Observatory data and found that from 2000 to 2023, the months with the fastest increase in mean temperature were March, September and November (about an increase of 0.7 degrees Celsius per decade). The months with the fastest temperature increase are in spring and autumn. This means that in the future, the risk of death caused by high-temperature weather will also extend to months other than summer.

     

    Under the aggravating hot weather of Hong Kong, Green Power urges the Government to strengthen urgently the city's ability to adapt to high temperatures and reduce the exposure of citizens to extremely high temperatures, including adding more shaded pedestrian corridors, strengthening community heat shelter services for the needed and reducing the heat sources in our living environment such as exhaust gas from the vehicles. At the same time, public health policies and medical services need to be improved to respond to the increasing risk of death caused by high temperatures. Ultimately the local carbon emission reduction measures must be accelerated to reduce economic and human losses caused by hot weather in the long term.


    And now I'd like to dedicate this song for everyone in Hong Kong. "The other side of the sun" by Janis Ian. Thank you and Enjoy!

    香港電台第三台

    09/06/2024 - 足本 Full (HKT 08:15 - 08:30)

    09/06/2024 - Dr Cheng Luk Ki, Director of Green Power