
A Hong Kong independent bookstore owner has been fined HK$32,000 (US$4,085) for holding a Spanish class in his shop after a court ruled the course took place at an unregistered school.
Pong Yat-ming, 52, was convicted on Friday of violating the Education Ordinance by organising a Spanish course in April last year at Book Punch, a bookstore he founded in Sham Shui Po in 2020.
Kowloon City Court earlier heard Pong’s defence at his trial, where he testified that he held the basic language course to promote Spanish culture as an “interest class”.
Advertisement
He denied a total of five summary offences levelled against him and his company, Active Experiential Learning Company Limited.
The bookstore owner said he “genuinely believed” that even though the course was educational and included teaching material about Spanish grammar and language usage, it still did not fall under the definition of a school under the Education Ordinance.
Advertisement
Pong pointed out that the then acting secretary for education Kevin Yeung Yun-hung told the Legislative Council in 2017, that “courses which simply aim at developing a hobby or an interest” did not require school registration.

Don't Miss:
-
Hong Kong animal groups urge HKTVmall boycott over life science experiments
-
Fear, anxiety grip Iranians ahead of US talks: ‘I’m scared of war starting again’
-
US-Iran talks leave Gulf states on edge about the price of peace
-
Move over, Hercules: China’s new Y-30 aims to outmuscle America’s best transport aircraft
-
Foreigners flock to China spas to enjoy unique cultural baths amid rise of wellness tourism

The “Chokubi” Crisis
Bhutan’s ‘Mindfulness City’ to Link to India by Rail
Cracks in the Sand: Gulf Monarchies’ Economic and Geopolitical Peril