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Two documents are required for registered non-Hong Kong company to change name, Form NN10 and a certified copy of any official document from the Government of Hong Kong. The fee of changing a non-Hong Kong company’s name is HKD$1425. [ 14 ]
The name change was prompted by the introduction of the City District Office scheme in 1968. The SHA was organised into four Divisions (General and Traditional; Lands; Narcotics; Public Relations), two Sections (Trust Funds; Liquor Licensing), Tenancy Inquiries Bureaux and the City District Commissioners and District Offices for Hong Kong and ...
Reunification of Hong Kong" [12] (Chinese: 香港回歸) was used by a minority of pro-Beijing politicians, lawyers and newspapers during Sino-British negotiations in 1983 and 1984, [13] and gradually became mainstream in Hong Kong by early 1997 at the latest.
The Registration and Electoral Office (REO) (Chinese: 選舉事務處) [1] is a department under the jurisdiction of the Constitutional and Mainland Affairs Bureau (CMAB) of the Hong Kong Government. [2]
Immigration Tower in Wan Chai, Hong Kong, Oct. 12, 2017. Credit - Roy Issa—South China Morning Post/Getty Images. H ong Kong no longer requires transgender people to undergo full gender ...
Generally, the Cantonese majority employ one or another romanization of Cantonese. [4] However, non-Cantonese immigrants may retain their hometown spelling in English. For example, use of Shanghainese romanization in names (e.g. Joseph Zen Ze-kiun) is more common in Hong Kong English than in official use in Shanghai where Mandarin-based pinyin has been in official use since the 1950s.
In 2021, the Hong Kong government proposed to tighten company search, including that the residential address and identification number of directors and company secretaries would not be accessed by the public, [25] that the search requires personal identification information such as name and HKID number [26] and that the individual registered ...
The Digital Policy Office (DPO, Chinese: 數字政策辦公室) is an agency of the Hong Kong government established in 2024, in charge of policy and regulation of information technology, information security, telecommunications and strengthening digitalization in Hong Kong. The Digital Policy Office is established by merging the Office of the ...