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View Full Version : Thinking of bringing kids to HK?


Lowkoon
25th Dec 2012, 11:58
not a problem, just bring $500,000 per child to put your son or daughters name on a waiting list! Then you get to pay your fees on top of this little charge! We call it a debenture here, other countries call it a bribe, and see it as illegal.

ESF Nomination Rights Scheme | English Schools Foundation (http://www.esf.edu.hk/esf-nomination-rights)

If you haven't got kids, or a spouse, spend the $500k on sterilisation before you get here, or get them a crash course in cantonese, as you will not be able to afford to educate them. this is not anti hk propaganda, this is the reality as of today, click the link and educate yourself on the reality.

mothergoose76
17th Jan 2013, 16:12
Young kids lungs make the best air filters - yes, please bring them, to help clean the air for the rest of us:)

Spyro_1
18th Jan 2013, 08:22
and be careful, it is 500,000HK$....
about 64,000US$ or 48,000€.....

Flickroll2
24th Jan 2013, 01:00
Lowkoon

Stop playing it down...!

Times everything 3 and your somewhere near the numbers...!!!!!

Don't be hookers of Aviation people!

Take heed!

There are better places to live...!:rolleyes:

cx252
24th Jan 2013, 09:34
go to Dubai and joint Emirates. Widen choices there.

jetjockey696
31st Jan 2013, 18:39
If you going to babies to HK.. just remember, the milk formula shortage..so can be hard to find baby milk.. so HK peoples facing nasty pollution from China as well as local baby formula shortage due to china... with its inferior baby milk formula tainted with melamine and some case fake baby formula... what a place to live in.. :ugh: its sounds like ghetto heaven...

article from SCMP.. a few weeks ago..

Parallel traders from the mainland are hoarding hundreds of tins of infant milk formula in the city as local parents struggle to buy supplies for their children.

A South China Morning Post investigation has found hundreds of boxes containing various brands of formula stored at the Advanced Technology Centre in Sheung Shui.

The building is a 10-minute walk from the MTR station and a favourite staging point for parallel traders, who are tryng to avoid paying hefty mainland taxes on goods by couriering the products across the border.

Milk formula brands that were scarce in North District pharmacies and supermarkets, such as Mead Johnson and Friso, could easily be found in the centre among stacks of boxes of food. The tins are taken to the centre in carts and trolleys and then repacked by the traders before they headed to the MTR station to take the short journey to the border checkpoint.

As shortages of certain brands of formula emerged this week, apparently because of mainland tourists' pre-Lunar New Year shopping sprees, the city's health minister yesterday warned retailers not to stockpile or sharply raise the price of formula.

"Hong Kong scrambles for milk formula", Video by Hedy Bok

"I urge retailers and pharmacies not to take advantage of current circumstances, as it would affect the interests of Hong Kong as a whole," Secretary for Food and Health Dr Ko Wing-man said on RTHK radio.

Also making such calls is the Consumer Council, which will meet manufacturers of major brands tomorrow in an effort to ensure adequate supply during Lunar New Year.

The watchdog received seven complaints about milk formula being sold out in from January 1 to 23. Last year as a whole, it received 15 complaints.

Angry mothers continued to complain yesterday, adding that their phone calls to the hotlines of several manufacturers failed to connect.

Lau Oi-kwok, chairman of Hong Kong General Chamber of Pharmacy, said he had heard rumours that pharmacies were being paid an extra HK$40 per tin of formula that they put aside for mainlanders.

One Hongkonger called an RTHK radio programme to report a dubious sales practice at one pharmacy. He was told that a certain brand of formula was out of stock and his Putonghua-speaking niece could buy two tins in the same store just two minutes later, but with an extra charge of HK$100 per tin.

Ko said the bureau would consider measures to crack down on unfair retail practices, such as stockpiling and price rises, but refused to elaborate.

"We will pinpoint the problem and then tackle it. But we do not wish to use administrative methods to control supply, as that would be a very irregular method," he said.

He acknowledged that a shortage existed. The dearth of formula comes even after major milk manufacturers promised to increase supply and chain stores pledged to limit customers to purchases of three tins per visit.

local
2nd Feb 2013, 05:24
Oh Lord give me strength, because here we go again with another Hong Kong bashing thread!