Today (26th) at around 4:00 a.m., a mainland man was queuing up to buy a ticket at a ticket office on Chai Wan Road in Hong Kong when he was suddenly attacked with knives by two Cantonese-speaking men.Injured, leaving a large pool of blood on the scene.After the police arrived at the scene, the injured were sent to the hospital, and they are tracing the whereabouts of the gangster and the motive of the injury.

According to Observation.com, Andy Lau's concert will start on the 4th of next month, and one of the ticket sales points will be located at Youth Square, No. 238, Chai Wan Road, Hong Kong.Although tickets have not yet gone on sale, people started queuing up as early as two weeks ago.At the time of the incident, about 4 to 5 people lined up overnight. There were a large number of cardboard seats on the ground, and the number of seats was already 73.

Hong Kong media reported that there were already people queuing outside the square at the time of the incident, and the first person in line had set up a tent; the second was the mainland man Zheng (58 years old) who was attacked this time, and he also set up a tent here.The tents have been lined up for about 10 days; the third is Resham lal, an Indian man staying in Hong Kong. He has been lined up for 7 days, saying that he is going to buy 20 concert tickets and admits that he will resell the excess tickets.

According to the Indian man, when the incident happened, the mainland man in the second row was sleeping, and suddenly he was woken up by two men who patted him to leave. The mainland man ignored him, and the other party left.After a while, the two suspected men turned back and attacked the mainland man with a long knife about 12 inches (about 30.5cm), causing his left ear and both arms to be stabbed, and the scene was covered with blood.

It is understood that the two men spoke Cantonese, and they took advantage of the chaos to escape after beheading Zheng.After the police and medical personnel arrived at the scene, they gave emergency treatment to the injured.

The police found Zheng's pink bag, a pair of shoes and an umbrella at the scene, with suspected regiment seal stickers on the bags.In addition, a taxi driver near the scene also witnessed the incident and provided information to the police to track down the perpetrator. It is reported that Zheng arrived in Hong Kong with a two-way permit. After the police investigated, it was classified as a wounding case, and the criminal investigation team of the Eastern District Police District followed up.The police are trying to hunt down two assailants, who are about 20 to 30 years old, about 1.66 meters tall, and one of them was holding a long knife at the time of the incident.

At 9 o'clock this morning, several police officers returned to the scene to inspect and checked whether the tents and environmental protection bags used by citizens to occupy seats contained offensive weapons. They left after about 15 minutes.

The injured man has been sent to the hospital for treatment. It is not clear why the gangster injured him. Survey: Nearly 70% of young people interviewed do not trust the Hong Kong government, and more than 60% are not interested in participating in governance

The Youth Research Institute, a think tank under the Hong Kong Association of Youth, interviewed more than 500 young people aged 18 to 34 a few months ago to investigate their views on Hong Kong's political governance talents.Not or very not interested, only 30.2% said they were interested, and 6.9% said they didn't know/hard to tell.

According to a Ming Pao report, the think tank believes that the main reason why young people lack interest in political governance is that Hong Kong lacks a perfect system for cultivating governance talents.

The poll was conducted between June 23 and July 4, interviewing 520 young people.Among the 327 interviewed young people who were not interested in participating in the governance work, 24.8% said that their lack of ability was the main reason.Four reasons, including public criticism, each accounted for more than 10%.

As for what is the biggest obstacle to cultivating governance talents in Hong Kong under the One Country, Two Systems, most respondents (31.3%) think that the society tends to be polarized, followed by the society’s negative impression of politicians’ tendencies (26.2%), and the third is the lack ofHighly recognized training institutions (15.8%).

The young people interviewed were also asked whether they trusted the Hong Kong government. 66.7% said they disagreed, only 21.9% said they agreed, and 11.3% didn't know/hard to say.

Regarding the inadequacy of the system for cultivating governance talents, the think tank suggests that the government strengthen the education of middle school students and provide systematic and in-depth internship opportunities for tertiary students, such as providing one-year internships related to public administration.The think tank also recommends expanding the existing political appointment system, including adding more political assistant positions.

Asked whether the government needs to improve the political system in order to attract more people to enter politics, think tank member Lin Zhihao said that the political system is the challenge facing Hong Kong, but emphasized that this study is not aimed at improving the political system, but under the current system,How to cultivate management talents, emphasizing that cultivating talents is a forward-looking investment, no matter whether the system changes or not, talents are needed.