Skip to content
Chimera readability score 78 out of 100, Expert reading level.

Chief Executive John Lee says government pressing ahead with first five-year development plan ‘at full speed’ to align with national blueprint
Beijing’s top representative in Hong Kong has expressed confidence in the city’s ability to achieve greater development by further integrating into the country, while the chief executive has said authorities are moving “at full speed” to draw up the first five-year plan to align with the national blueprint.
Speaking at a cultural gala marking the 29th anniversary of the city’s return to Chinese sovereignty on Tuesday evening, liaison office director Zhou Ji said he believed Hong Kong, with “the full care and support of the central government”, would be able to “seize strategic opportunities, better coordinate development and security, innovate and seek change, boost the economy, pursue development, promote reform and improve people’s livelihoods”.
He also expressed confidence Hong Kong would successfully formulate its first five-year plan and further serve the overall development of the country.
Zhou said Hong Kong had overcome successive challenges since its return to Chinese rule, including the Asian financial crisis, the global financial crisis, Sars, the Covid-19 pandemic and social unrest.
Hong Kong had become “one of the safest cities in the world” under the national security law, he added.
“The motherland regards Hong Kong as a pearl in its palm, and President Xi Jinping has always cared deeply about Hong Kong and kept it close to his heart,” Zhou said.
He also mentioned the city’s first astronaut, payload specialist Lai Ka-ying, who is currently aboard the Shenzhou-23 mission.
“The pace of Hong Kong’s integration into the overall development of the country is accelerating. The city is deeply engaged in the development of the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macau Greater Bay Area, working hand in hand with Guangdong and Macau to successfully host the 15th National Games,” he said.

Sentinel — Human

Confidence

This text presents official statements regarding Hong Kong's development and integration, exhibiting characteristics consistent with formal government reporting rather than synthetic content.

Signals Detected
low severity: Varied sentence structure and reflective tone typical of official diplomatic statements; not the uniform rhythm of pure LLM generation.
low severity: Coherent narrative flow centered on specific political/development goals, grounded in attributed statements.
low severity: The text is a direct report of stated facts and quotes, lacking the pattern of talking points or vague attribution common in synthetic content.
Human Indicators
The inclusion of specific, layered historical context (Sars, financial crises, social unrest) alongside positive political claims suggests a real-world journalistic framing.
The nuanced relationship expressed by the liaison office chief (Zhou Ji) between pragmatic development and broader national goals is typical of human diplomatic discourse.