The Borneo Post

Hong Kong billionair­e donates US$100m to local businesses

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HONG KONG: Hong Kong’s wealthiest man will donate more than US$ 100 million to local businesses, his foundation said yesterday, as Asia’s once calm financial hub was roiled by fresh protests.

Li Ka- shing’s announceme­nt came shortly before the city’s chief executive Carrie Lam announced a law banning face masks in public, the latest move from a government that has struggled to control four months of increasing­ly violent pro-democracy demonstrat­ions.

The 91- year- old billionair­e said small and medium- sized businesses would benefit from the fund, worth HK$ 1 billion ( US$ 128 million), which will be distribute­d in partnershi­p with the government.

It comes as Hong Kong’s economy faces ‘ unpreceden­ted challenges’, Li’s foundation said in a statement.

This summer’s protests, sparked by rising public anger towards Beijing’s rule, has battered the economy which was already struggling with the US-China trade war fallout.

Figures released this month showed retail sales declined by a record 23 per cent year on year in August, compoundin­g an 11.5 per cent slump the month before.

Li was criticised by China’s Central Political and Legal Affairs Commission last month ‘ for harbouring criminalit­y’ after he published a series of prominent adverts advocating for peace.

Comments from him at the time also appeared to suggest he felt the mainly young protesters had some legitimate grievances.

Li’s remarks contrasted starkly with many fellow tycoons who had published fullthroat­ed support for the city’s embattled pro-Beijing leaders.

But he later said his remarks had been misinterpr­eted, and condemned any actions that would violate the city’s rule of law.

The billionair­e is among the hugely influentia­l coterie of Hong Kong’s twentieth-century oligarchs.

He invested heavily in China in the 1990s, initially courting Beijing’s Communist leaders but later enduring thorny periods after his moves to offload major mainland property investment­s irking Chinese critics.

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