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Hong Kong. Authorized by. Hong Kong Basic Law. Website. www.judiciary.hk /en /home /index.html. Principal Family Judge. Currently. C K Chan. The Family Court of Hong Kong is a court (part of the District Court) [1] which mainly deals with cases relating to divorces and welfare maintenance for children.
Transcriptions. The Mainland Travel Permit for Hong Kong and Macao Resident[1] (colloquially as Home Return Permit[2] or Home Visit Permit[3]) is a travel document issued by the Exit and Entry Administration of the People's Republic of China. This card -size biometric document is issued to Chinese citizens with permanent residency in Hong Kong ...
The Hong Kong identity card (officially HKIC, [2] [3] commonly HKID) is an official identity document issued by the Immigration Department of Hong Kong. According to the Registration of Persons Ordinance (Cap. 177), all residents of age 11 or above who are living in Hong Kong for longer than 180 days must, within 30 days of either reaching the age of 11 or arriving in Hong Kong, register for ...
The majority are issued to citizens of the People's Republic of China who have migrated to Hong Kong on a One-way Permit, have lost their mainland hukou thus are unable to obtain a PRC passport, but have not resided in Hong Kong for the 7 years required to be eligible for a HKSAR passport.
Hong Kong Special Administrative Region passport. The Hong Kong Special Administrative Region passport (Chinese: 香港特別行政區護照) is a passport issued only to permanent residents of Hong Kong who also hold Chinese citizenship. [2] In accordance with the Basic Law of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, since the handover in ...
Usage[edit] This is a subtemplate of Template:Cite Hong Kong case which generates tooltips on abbreviations in Court of Appeal case citations, to help lay readers understand them. This subtemplate normally should not be called directly from articles, but only from other case citation templates.
The High Court Building is located at 38 Queensway, Admiralty. The 20-storey building was built in 1985 as the home of the then Supreme Court of Hong Kong, which was renamed in 1997. It was named the Supreme Court Building, and the road leading to its main entrance is still named Supreme Court Road.
The British and Chinese governments entered negotiations over the future of Hong Kong in the early 1980s and agreed on the Sino-British Joint Declaration in 1984. [13] The basic principles for the right of abode are set as part of this treaty [14] and further defined in the Hong Kong Basic Law, [15] which encompass the right to land with the added entitlement that a bearer cannot be deported.