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Andrew McCormick
Andrew McCormick
Andrew is a writer and reporter whose work has appeared in The New York Times and other publications. He is a graduate of Columbia Journalism School.

For many Cambodians deported under Trump’s hardline immigration policy, the United States had been their home for decades. Now, they struggle to adjust to life in the country of their birth.

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African-American soldier William White was taken prisoner during the Korean war and stayed in China for 11 years, studying law in Beijing and marrying a local. He eventually moved to the US with his family via Hong Kong in 1965

Annual soccer tournament is the chance of a lifetime for former rough sleepers, drug addicts and alcoholics. To earn a spot on the team headed for Mexico, players must show determination and growth on and off the field

Helen Lui was the first female Chinese officer to be sent to UK for advance training, reach the rank of senior inspector and lead a stop-and-search operation

Nguyen Van Son and his neighbours on a footbridge in Sham Shui Po, Hong Kong’s poorest district, have few places to go after packing up their shelters: a subdivided flat, a ‘coffin home’, or another street berth.

A generation aroused by Tiananmen incident to fight for democracy locally and in mainland China no longer connects with young people focused on Hong Kong’s fate, and failure of Occupy Central sit-ins has dulled appetite for activism.

Among the high rollers and the party crowd at the city’s oldest racecourse are the regulars who live for Wednesday nights and the chance for a bit of fun. For one who bet too much, the last night of the season is the chance for a flutter.