The Asian reporter. (Portland, Or.) 1991-current, November 06, 2023, Page 19, Image 19

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    THE ASIAN REPORTER
November 6, 2023
C O M M U N I T Y
n Page 19
C L A S S I F I E D S
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H Mart
Lily Market
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16 DAYS. Team China performs during the team free routine artistic
swimming competition at the 19th Asian Games in Hangzhou, China. The
Asian Games closed its 16-day run at the 80,000-seat Olympic Sports
Center Stadium with host nation China again in command. China won 201
gold medals and 383 overall at the competition. (AP Photo/Aaron Favila)
The Asian Games close in China.
Nagoya, Japan, coming next.
Continued from page 13
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Hong Phat
Supermarket
101 SE 82nd Ave.
Portland
2026 Aichi-Nagoya Games,
said Japan would build
only two new venues,
unwilling to splurge as it
did for the recent Tokyo
Olympics.
Hangzhou is reported to
have built 56 sports
facilities and 30 training
sites as well as major
infrastructure investments
for the games, which were
delayed a year by the
COVID-19 pandemic.
Nakamori said the Chi-
nese “hardware was won-
derful. We can’t pretend
those kind of games. Our
concept is to use existing
venues.”‘
He said the two new
venues that were being
built are a stadium and an
arena. In addition, Nagoya
will use the swimming and
diving venue in Tokyo built
for the 2020 Olympics, and
will hold cycling and
equestrian events near
Tokyo.
“That means we have to
work on the software and
people power,” he added.
“For our side it is a
disadvantage because we
lose one year, especially for
the marketing activity.”
Chen, the secretary
general of the local
organizing committee, was
asked if Hangzhou would
consider an Olympic bid.
“The venues are suitable
to hold a large, multi-sport
event like the Olympics,”
Chen said. “After the close
of the Asian Games, what
we focus on is how the
venues can be extensively
used by the people. But we
haven’t thought about
whether we would hold the
Olympic Games.”
Hong Kong court upholds a ruling
in favor of equal inheritance rights
Continued from page 2
as taxation, civil service
benefits, and dependent
visas.
Many
of
the
government’s concessions
were won through legal
challenges in recent years
as the city has seen a
growing social acceptance
of same-sex marriage.
The ruling is a victory for
the city’s LGBTQ+ move-
ment and is expected to
have a strong impact on the
lives of same-sex couples
from Hong Kong who
married overseas.
Also in October, the same
court upheld two earlier
rulings that supported the
granting of subsidized
housing benefits to same-
sex married partners. In
September, the city’s top
court ruled in a landmark
decision that the govern-
ment should provide a
framework for recognizing
same-sex partnerships.
The more recent ruling
involved
a
years-long
battle fought by Henry Li
and his late partner, Edgar
Ng. After they married in
London in 2017, Ng bought
a subsidized flat as his
matrimonial home with Li.
He was concerned that if he
died intestate, his propri-
eties would not be passed to
Li. He passed away in 2020
after suffering years of
depression.
Nongovernmental
or-
ganization Hong Kong
Marriage Equality called
on the government not to
appeal the judgement.
With the recent court
rulings, it is clear that the
right thing to do is to
recognize same-sex part-
nerships in a compre-
hensive manner, it said.
In a statement issued by
his solicitors, Li also said
he hopes the government
will respect the judgement.
“It added insult to injury
— that the government
repeatedly argued in open
court I am not Edgar’s
husband and should be
treated as a stranger to
him, while I was still
mourning,” he said.