Bangkok Post

‘Leader must cooperate’: Li

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HONG KONG: Hong Kong’s richest man Li Ka-shing said he would vote for the candidate who is willing to cooperate with Chinese authoritie­s in the semi-autonomous region’s upcoming leadership vote.

Mr Li, 88, was speaking after his flagship CK Hutchison Holdings posted a net profit of HK$33.01 billion for 2016, 6% up year-on-year, despite global economic and political uncertaint­y.

But questions at the results news conference centered on Mr Li’s preference ahead of Sunday’s vote for Hong Kong’s next chief executive, the first since mass rallies in 2014 calling for fully free elections failed to bring about change.

Mr Li and his two sons are members of the election committee of 1,194 mainly pro-establishm­ent representa­tives of special interest groups who will select the territory’s leader.

Pro-democracy activists reject the vote as a farce and unrepresen­tative of the Hong Kong people.

“Whoever is able to communicat­e and cooperate with the country well, and has the trust of the central government, I will vote for that person,” Mr Li said.

Former deputy leader Carrie Lam is seen as Beijing’s favourite for the job, but is intensely disliked by the pro-democracy camp, having promoted a Beijing-backed political reform package rejected as a sham by opponents.

Her main rival is ex-finance chief John Tsang, perceived as a more moderate establishm­ent choice and the public’s clear favourite in opinion polls.

Mr Li said Hong Kong needed a period of stability. “Regarding Hong Kong’s future, these [next] five years cannot be a repeat of the past five years. We hope that there will be a new phase,” he told reporters.

Current leader Leung Chunying, seen as a puppet of Beijing, has served a turbulent term marked by running battles between protesters and police and the emergence of an independen­ce movement.

At one point Mr Li appeared to choke up as he said Hong Kong needed to improve but later said it was a cold that had caused him pause. “I love Hong Kong ... today our GDP has fallen to around 2%. Why can’t we do better?” he asked, comparing it with the growth he saw after he arrived in the former British colony in the 1940s from mainland China. “If you talk about one man one vote, we had it. China had given it to us.”

The Beijing-backed proposal which sparked 2014’s “Umbrella Movement” promised a public vote for the region’s leader in 2017, but said candidates must be vetted.

 ??  ?? Li: Hoping for new Hong Kong phase
Li: Hoping for new Hong Kong phase

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