New Straits Times

HK PROPERTY TYCOON WALTER KWOK DIES

Former Sun Hung Kai chairman, 68, passed away on Saturday

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WALTER Kwok, the former chairman of Hong Kong real-estate developer Sun Hung Kai Properties Ltd, died Saturday morning, according to a statement from his family. He was 68.

“We are saddened to announce the passing of Walter, who left this world peacefully on the morning of October 20, with his loving family by his bedside,” said the statement, adding that church service arrangemen­ts would be announced in due course. It didn’t disclose details of his death.

Walter suffered a heart attack on August 27 and had been transferre­d to the Adventist Hospital, here, according to local media reports.

Walter was the oldest of three sons who inherited the fortune of Kwok Tak-seng, a grocery wholesaler from Guangdong province, China, who immigrated here after World War 2. Kwok Tak-seng joined Fung King-hey and Lee Shau Kee to found Sun Hung Kai Properties in 1963.

The company sold shares in an initial public offering, here, in August 1972 and became one of the world’s largest real-estate developers by market value. Sun Hung Kai’s business has stretched into other areas, including logistics and telecommun­ications.

The three sons — Walter, Thomas and Raymond — took over the company after their father died from a heart attack in 1990. Walter, also known by his Chinese name Ping-sheung, ran the company until 2008. He was kidnapped in 1997 by a Hong Kong gang leader nicknamed “Big Spender”, who also held billionair­e Li Ka-shing’s son Victor Li for ransom.

A public family squabble led to Walter’s extended leave and, subsequent­ly, his ouster as chairman in 2008. Walter said Thomas and Raymond had him removed from his position because they thought he was suffering from a mental illness, which he had denied.

Hong Kong’s Standard newspaper reported Walter was forced to go on leave after a disagreeme­nt with his brothers over a female friend’s growing influence in the company. He later sued his siblings for libel.

Their mother Kwong Siu-hing took over as chairman, and Thomas and Raymond later became co-chairmen of Sun Hung Kai. Walter applied to the High Court in 2008 to prevent the board from removing him from his post, alleging that his brothers opposed his questionin­g of the way the company awarded constructi­on contracts, and other corporate governance issues. Walter and the family settled their dispute amicably in January 2014.

In 2010, Walter began pursuing his own property projects with his company Empire Group Holdings. Empire this year was awarded a redevelopm­ent project in the tourist area Tsim Sha Tsui, on which it planned to spend HK$6 billion (RM3.18 billion), according to the South China Morning Post.

Thomas and Raymond were arrested in March 2012 by Hong Kong’s anti-graft agency, and were charged with bribery and misconduct four months later.

According to the Independen­t Commission Against Corruption, Thomas, Raymond and two other men conspired to provide Rafael Hui, the city’s former No. 2 government official, with free use of two apartments and two unsecured loans for unspecifie­d favours. The Kwoks denied any wrongdoing and pleaded not guilty in March 2013.

The company later named Adam Kwok, Thomas’s son, and Edward Kwok, Raymond’s son, as alternate directors. Thomas was sentenced to five years in jail in 2014, and lost an appeal last year. His brother Raymond was found not guilty.

 ?? BLOOMBERG PIC ?? Walter Kwok and his two brothers, Thomas and Raymond, took over Hong Kong real-estate developer Sun Hung Kai Properties Ltd after their father died of a heart attack in 1990.
BLOOMBERG PIC Walter Kwok and his two brothers, Thomas and Raymond, took over Hong Kong real-estate developer Sun Hung Kai Properties Ltd after their father died of a heart attack in 1990.

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