Gai Wu 20-5 DEA – 2 November, 2013

Lau Sze Wa

Wesley Feausi, coach of Gai Wu, reflects on their hard fought 20-5 victory over DEA “We always knew DEA were going to be a difficult prospect, and with home advantage, as such, this game was always going to come down to the team who made the least mistakes, defended well and scored points when down the right end of the pitch.

DEA started as expected, running hard and direct with their attack, stand-out performers were Ellie-May in the forwards and Natasha in the backs. We were able to defend well in the opening encounters and were lucky enough to come away a single try in the first half from winger GMA (Lau Sze Wa), who would add two more in the second-half to complete her 2nd hat-trick of the season. Half-time score 5-0 Gai Wu.

The second half proved to be no different to the first, both forward packs working hard cancelling each other out. It was a fantastic battle of two sides with excellent attacking weapons out wide as well as the hard nose grinders in the front row and ‘game breakers’ in the back row. DEA scored a try early in the second half giving them early momentum only for Captain Jay, Vice Captain Tammy and Christy to rev up the DEA girls to return the favour. GMA scored her second and third tries of the game bringing her try tally into double figures for the season and we were searching for that 4-try bonus point to make-up for the lapse in defence earlier. Rainbow Leung did exactly that, scoring our 4th try of the game. Full-time score 20-5 Gai Wu.”

Wesley continues “It was a great game for the fans and shows that women’s rugby in Hong Kong at club level is raising the bar each year complementing the HKSI who have initiated a professional program for elite women’s players. Gai Wu has many young girls new to rugby but they have stepped up this season and are playing hard and enjoying the games – although we have plenty of areas to improve the enthusiasm and commitment is there.”

If you’re interested in playing rugby at any level contac[email protected] to find out how.

Gai Wu:
Tammy LAU (vc), Mang Li, Ka Wai Lam, Yung Ching, Sharon Tsang, Po Kei Man, Melody Li, Christy Cheng, Sum Wai Sham, Emmy Chan, Rainbow Leung, Jay Ho (c), Candy Cheng, GMA Lau, Aggie Poon, Shun Lee, Momo Lam, Belsy Yuen, Sharon Lui, Kwan Tang, BB Lee, Sum Chan
Tries: GMA (Lau Sze Wa) (3), Rainbow LeungGai Wu post match - 2 November, 2013

Women’s Rugby Results – 2 November, 2013

Women’s 15s Results

Kowloon v Tai Po Dragons
@ Kings Park

HK Scottish 0-20 HKFC
@ Shep Kip Mei

Tigers 5-20 Gai Wu
@ Kings Park

Gai Wu:
Tammy LAU (vc), Mang Li, Ka Wai Lam, Yung Ching, Sharon Tsang, Po Kei Man, Melody Li, Christy Cheng, Sum Wai Sham, Emmy Chan, Rainbow Leung, Jay Ho (c), Candy Cheng, GMA Lau, Aggie Poon, Shun Lee, Momo Lam, Belsy Yuen, Sharon Lui, Kwan Tang, BB Lee, Sum Chan
Tries: GMA (Lau Sze Wa) (3), Rainbow Leung

CWB Phoenix 5-10 Valley Black
@ So Kon Po

CWB Pheonix:
Queenie Yip, Liu Kit Ying, Eto Wong, Chow Mei Nam, Winnie On, Gofish Tam, Bacteria Wong, Isabella Lo, Dalmatian Chan, Hoty Chan, Lee Man Yi, Dora Kwok, Kim Lau, Stephanie Siu, Tang Ka, Lam Wing Tung, Lee Wing Yee, Lo Tsz Ching, Cheung Ka Ki

Women’s 10s Results

Police Sirens 32-10 Kowloon
@ Police Boundary Street

Tin Shui Wai 17-19 HKCC
@ Tin Shui Wai Community Sports

City Sparkles 49-0 University
@ Shep Kip Mei

SRC 7-19 Gai Wu
@ Kings Park

CWB Phoenix v Valley Black
@ So Kon Po

Unknown Pleasures – A Joy Division Celebration from Peter Hook & The Light – 31 March, 2014

Unknown Pleasures - A Joy Division Celebration From Peter Hook & The Light - 31 March, 2014

 

Closer - A Joy Division Celebration From Peter Hook & The Light - 31 March, 2014

Peter Hook & The Light will perform Joy Division’s ‘Unknown Pleasures’ and ‘Closer’ live in Hong Kong on the 31 March, 2014.

Unknown Pleasures – A Joy Division Celebration from Peter Hook & The Light
When: 8pm, 31 March, 2013
Where: Star Hall – KITEC
How Much: $580, $480, $380 – Advance tickets are available at Music Life (Sino Centre, Mongkok). For enquiry, please call +852-27830135
Details: www.peterhook.co.uk

Grand Opening @ Shelter Italian Bar & Restaurant – 31 October, 2013

http://bcmagazine.smugmug.com/Bcene-photos/2013/2013-10-31-ShelterGrandOpening/33128624_925qV8#!i=2873700957&k=k72Ff3j

http://bcmagazine.smugmug.com/Bcene-photos/2013/2013-10-31-ShelterGrandOpening/33128624_925qV8#!i=2873615556&k=f39jnQz

http://bcmagazine.smugmug.com/Bcene-photos/2013/2013-10-31-ShelterGrandOpening/33128624_925qV8#!i=2873602295&k=FkFHwNr

http://bcmagazine.smugmug.com/Bcene-photos/2013/2013-10-31-ShelterGrandOpening/33128624_925qV8#!i=2873677001&k=DcprBkC

http://bcmagazine.smugmug.com/Bcene-photos/2013/2013-10-31-ShelterGrandOpening/33128624_925qV8#!i=2873748498&k=hgQbWdx

Click on the photos to see more

Shelter, 7/F Hysan Place, Causeway Bay www.shekterhk.com

Women’s 15s Rugby Results – 26 October, 2013

HKFC 0-36 Valley Black
@ HK Football Club

Valley Black
Liz Iafeta, KK Wong, Sarah Nash, Sonia Vashi, Julie Savoie, Lorraine Parisot Rebekka Gardarsdottir, Isla Littlewood, Bobbie Poulton, Jayne So, Wuwu Haiman, Karen So, Adrienne Garvey, Elisa Crombie, Tanya Young, Anita Jensen,  Aggie Au-Yeung, Iris Chan, Wing Chan, Julie Diva
Tries: Adrienne Garvey, Julie Savoie, Sarah Nash, Jayne So, Tanya Young, Bobbie Poulton
Conversion: Karen So (2), Adrienne Garvey

HKFC
Shonagh Ryan, Amy Kong, Kim Kan, Fiona Atkinson, Christina McLaughlin, Anne McManus, Marie Gaschignard, Allison Lee, Aileen Ryan, Nicole Pang, Caroline Lau, Daniella Means, Daisy Miers, Helen Lee, Aysha Fiaz, Meghan Hayes, Thavy Read, Lois Lu

Tigers 61-0 Tai Po Dragons
@ Happy Valley

HK Scottish 0-75 CWB Pheonix
@ Shek Kip Mei

CWB Pheonix
Queenie Yip, Liu Kit Ying, Eto Wong, Chow Mei Nam, Gofish Tam, Lam Wing Tung, Bacteria Wong, Isabella Lo, Hoty Chan, Dora, Chan Ka Wai, Stpehanie Tang, Dora Kwok, Kim Lau, Tanyo Lo, Winnie On, Tang Ka, Stpehanie Siu, Henrietta Wong
Tries: Liu Kit Ying, Isabella Lo, Hoty Chan, Chan Ka Wai, Stpehanie Tang (4), Tanyo Lo (3), Tang Ka, Henrietta Wong

Kowloon 0-65 Gai Wu
@ King’s Park

Kowloon
Cham Lok Yee, Fung Tsz Yan, Cheung Hoi Ying, Tsang Sin Yan, Au Yeung Tsz Lam, Claire Forster, Jasmine Au Yeung, Christie Gordan, Kim Lam, Ho Chun Yan, Chu Wing Yee, Chau Hei Tung, Yip Yuk Wun, Fung Wai Man, Tsang Wing Chi, Mak Ho Yee

Valley Black

Cocaine Mail

cocaine mail 1

It began on what seemed like any other normal, if chaotic, day; the office was buzzing with people writing, creating and designing the next edition of bc magazine. The building didn’t have mail boxes, nor did our office boast an external mailbox, so, as usual, the postman dropped the day’s mail on the reception counter sometime around mid-morning. It was a typical day’s delivery: cheques, invoices, press releases and promotional mail from companies angling for us to write about them and, on that February day in 2010, a Hong Kong Post oversized A4 PostPack envelope, the type with bubble wrap protecting the contents. Something you can buy at any post office – nothing exceptional.

It was such a normal day, I don’t even remember what I was doing before opening the mail. A PostPack wouldn’t usually stand out, we often received press releases in them – but this one was different; it was marked “Return to Sender” from Canada with our office address stuck on the back. I didn’t recall sending anything to Canada and couldn’t think why anyone else in the office would have, so was a little curious about what the package might contain. To give edge to the mystery, it was covered in custom stamps and scribbles from the various postal sorting offices it had passed through on its journey from Hong Kong to Canada and back.

Peeling back the sticky flap revealed something wrapped in what looked like carbon paper. That, too, was not quite as unusual as it might seem – PR companies and advertisers send the media all sorts of things wrapped in all sorts of ways. Not knowing if the item was fragile, I pulled it carefully from the PostPack and set it on my desk before tearing open the carbon paper wrap.

Sitting there on my desk was an A4 sized vacuum-sealed plastic package full of white powder.

Now, beyond the talcum found in a handy containers in supermarkets, my knowledge of white powder was limited to what I’d seen on TV and film screens: wraps smaller than sugar cubes passed furtively from dealer to buyer or blocks heavily wrapped in plastic to be sliced and split by police making a bust.

Yet there on my desk was a vacuum-sealed package of what looked suspiciously like cocaine. Thoughts flash through my mind: It looks like cocaine, but it can’t be… Why would there be a pack of cocaine on my desk? …Why is someone sending cocaine through the post? …It can’t be cocaine… Best call the police to be sure!

It’s quite surreal phoning the police to tell them you think you’ve just received a block of cocaine in the post, would they please send someone around. Not something I thought I’d ever be doing. It’s even more surreal when assorted police and customs officials descend to poke and prod at the ominous package before spiriting it away. We gave statements and expected answers but were left in limbo waiting to learn what exactly was in the package. A couple of days later the suspense lifted – a customs officer phoned to say yes it was cocaine, high quality cocaine, and worth about $2 million on the streets in the Canada and the US. The package had revealed no fingerprints and the carbon paper had been used to fool the custom’s X-ray machines into showing up a solid object in the PostPack.

Beyond the shock and disbelief was a sort of “What the fuck! These things only happen in the movies!” – but that, we thought, was the end of a curious incident that provided the office with no end of chatter and debate… until the next PostPak arrived a couple of weeks later. Complete with “Return to Sender” sticker but from a different address in Canada. And a week or so later, yet another…

The packages were followed by phone calls; multiple call-and-hang-ups to the office and the staff mobiles. Thugs – for want of a better way to describe them – appeared, loitering around for hours in the corridors of our office building, standing there-say nothing.

As our lease expired I looked to move the office to a more secure building, only for our new landlord to be threatened even before we moved in – I never did discover how they came across the new address. So I arranged to collect the mail at the post office, and over the following months we handed PostPack after PostPack to the police. I lost count in the end, 15 or 16 I think it was; the final straw, which prompted a desperate plea to the police to intercept the packets before they arrived in our mail box, was finding three “RTS” PostPacks in it: $6 million worth of cocaine.
cocaine mail - 3 packages

After that we never received another – I don’t know if they stopped coming or whether the police did intercept them. Even now, three years later, I struggle to make sense of it. The questions remain unanswered: If each PostPack could so easily go undetected through four sets of customs in and out of Hong Kong and Canada, why do people carry drugs on planes? Who has that much cocaine to keep sending it to addresses in Canada; surely the buyer would complain about not receiving his product? One package, maybe two – but why keep sending it month after month? That’s the curious part, the bit that doesn’t make sense, and I can’t fit the pieces of the story together to create one that makes sense.

And, disappointingly the police informed us we weren’t eligible to receive a reward for handing in the drugs.