Hong Kong parents warned of choking, injury risks from catapult and tangram toys
Hong Kong Customs has warned of injury and suffocation risks associated with a catapult toy and a tangram set, urging retailers to remove them from sale. On Saturday, the Customs and Excise Department seized 700 units of these toys and issued a prohibition notice banning their sale.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedHong Kong Customs has warned of injury and suffocation risks associated with a catapult toy and a tangram set, urging retailers to remove them from sale. On Saturday, the Customs and Excise Department seized 700 units of these toys and issued a prohibition notice banning their sale. This action followed safety tests conducted on toys purchased at the Chinese New Year fair. The catapult's projectile was found to have sufficient kinetic energy to cause injury, while the tangram set contained small components posing a suffocation risk. Neither product displayed the legally required warning labels or markings. Parents have been advised to immediately stop children from playing with these toys, and traders have been instructed to remove them from shelves.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedNeither product carried required warning labels, hazard cautions, or mandatory identification markings.
The tangram set contains small components posing a suffocation risk if accidentally swallowed.
The catapult toy's projectile has sufficient kinetic energy to cause eye or face injury.
Hong Kong Customs seized 700 units of the toys and issued a prohibition notice banning their sale.
Catapult and tangram toys pose injury and suffocation risks to children in Hong Kong.