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Matt Hancock has talked about the “injustice” he faced during the COVID pandemic in the latest episode of Celebrity SAS: Who Dares Wins.

The former health secretary resigned from government in June 2021 after it emerged he had broken his own guidance by kissing and embracing his aide, Gina Coladangelo, in his office.

In the penultimate episode of the series, which airs on Sunday, the 45-year-old is made to strip down to his boxers in an interrogation that sees him accused of having an “attitude”.

Early in the episode, Hancock is interviewed by Jason Fox and Chris Oliver about the pandemic and is asked about how he dealt with being “vilified”.

“I feel a sense of injustice at being made to be essentially accused of corruption,” he said.

“Because that is what, if you boil it down, the accusation is, when I’ve essentially given my professional life so far in public service, and I know for a fact we did the right thing.

“And I didn’t benefit a drop from it and it’s just this sense of injustice that, hold on, I was doing the best I could in difficult circumstances and now I get a load of s*** for it.

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“[Of] course it has an impact on me professionally that I have to deal with, but it doesn’t matter here [pointing to chest].

“What matters here is what I think of myself and also what the people I love and care about think of me and what people I respect think of me.”

Asked if he sees the course as a chance of redemption, he adds: “Well, I don’t know about redemption… the thing about this course is, as you say, it strips you back and you’ve got to leave it all on the line.”

Read more:
Hancock says TV stint – banking him £45,000 – sees him ‘push limits’
Hancock says UK approach to pandemic planning was ‘completely wrong’

Last year, the MP appeared on I’m A Celebrity… Get Me Out of Here! – pocketing £320,000 in the process.

He said £10,000 from that total was donated to charity, a figure he said was more than the MPs’ salary he still received while appearing on the reality TV show.

“I didn’t primarily do it [go on the reality show] for the money, I primarily did it to try to show who I am,” Hancock told ITV’s Good Morning Britain programme in January this year.

“I think £10,000 is actually a decent sum.”

Celebrity SAS: Who Dares Wins continues on Channel 4.

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Hong Kong invests $125M in AI, expands Cyberport’s supercomputing power

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Hong Kong invests 5M in AI, expands Cyberport’s supercomputing power

Hong Kong’s Cyberport, a government-backed business hub focused on Web3, blockchain and artificial intelligence, is ramping up its investment in emerging technologies to position the city as a global tech leader.

On Feb. 27, Cyberport hosted the “AI Safety, Trust, and Responsibility” forum with international AI academic institutions to discuss AI governance, safety and responsible innovation initiatives.

The Cyberport hub hosts over 270 blockchain technology-related enterprises and more than 350 startups specializing in AI and big data research and development.

Hong Kong Cyberport hosts AI summit. Source: Cyberport

A day prior, on Feb. 26, the Hong Kong government’s 2025–26 budget paid special attention to emerging technologies, aiming to “seize the critical opportunities presented by technological reform and artificial intelligence development.”

Hong Kong invests heavily in Web3 and AI via the Cyberport hub

The Chinese Special Administrative Region allocated 1 billion Hong Kong dollars ($125.5 million) to establish the Hong Kong AI Research and Development Institute, Financial Secretary Paul Chan Mo-po announced during the Hing Kong budget speech.

Related: Hong Kong regulator unveils ‘ASPIRe’ roadmap to become global crypto hub

The institute is dedicated to “facilitating upstream R&D, transforming midstream and downstream R&D outcomes, and expanding application scenarios.”

To fuel the Web3, blockchain and AI innovation, Cyberport’s Artificial Intelligence Supercomputing Centre (AISC), which launched on Dec. 9, 2024, will grow to a computing power of 3,000 petaFLOPS and will be able to process 3,000 quadrillion floating-point operations per second.

Streamlining AI research and talent development

Additionally, one of the co-organizers of the AI forum, the World Digital Technology Academy (WDTA), also announced the establishment of the “WDTA Asia-Pacific Institute  (preparatory)” at Cyberport. 

Yale Li, the executive chairman of WDTA, highlighted the institute’s three core initiatives. These include building a “safety-native” technological framework, establishing a “human-oriented” value system and commitment to “responsible innovation.”

Cyberport has signed numerous Memorandums of Understanding (MoUs) with universities and institutions to help students with internship and employment opportunities. Lastly, the Hong Kong government allocated $3 billion Hong Kong dollars ($385.6 million) to Cyberport for the launch of a three-year AI Subsidy Scheme to support the innovations.

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