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Li Jiachao's team | Check out the full list of high-level government officials

2022-06-19T07:16:36.668Z


The list of senior government officials of Li Jiachao was announced. The Chief Secretary for Administration was served by the former Chief Executive Officer Chen Guoji, Chen Maobo remained as the Financial Secretary, and Lin Dingguo, the former chairman of the Bar Association, served as the Secretary for Justice. Policy Bureau Reorganization


The list of senior government officials of the Li Jiachao government was announced. The Chief Secretary for Administration was appointed by the former Chief Executive Officer Chen Guoji, Chen Maobo remained as the Financial Secretary, and Lin Dingguo, the former chairman of the Bar Association, served as the Secretary for Justice.


After the reorganization of the policy bureau, there are three secretaries who remain in the original bureau, including the Secretary for Security, Tang Bingqiang, the Secretary for Constitutional and Mainland Affairs, Tsang Kwok-wai, and the Secretary for Financial Services and the Treasury, Xu Zhengyu.


Li Jiachao.

(File photo/Photo by Zheng Zifeng)

Chief Executive Lee Ka-chao (former Chief Secretary for Administration)

Li Jiachao served as a trainee inspector in 1977, was promoted to Chief Superintendent in 1997, was appointed as Deputy Commissioner of Police (Management) in 2010, left the police position in 2012 and was appointed as Deputy Secretary of Security, and was promoted to Secretary of Security in 2017 , to assume the post of Chief Secretary for Administration in June 2021.

On April 6 this year, Li Jiachao announced his candidacy for the chief executive and became the only candidate, elected with 1,416 votes.

Chen Guoji.

(file picture)

Chief Secretary for Administration Chan Kwok-kee (former Director of the Chief Executive's Office)

Chen Guoji joined the People's Immigration Department in 1982 as an Assistant Immigration Officer. He worked in the Immigration Division of the Beijing Office. He was promoted to Assistant Director of Immigration in 2007 and became Deputy Director in 2009.

In 2011, he succeeded Bai Yunliu as Director of Immigration.

In May 2017, Chen Guoji became the director-designate of the Chief Executive's Office. After Lin Zheng took office, he was appointed as the director of the Chief Executive's Office.

In July 2020, he was appointed as the Secretary-General of the National Security Council.

Zhuo Yongxing.

(file picture)

Deputy Secretary for Administration Cheuk Wing-hing (Former Permanent Secretary for Innovation and Technology Bureau)

Cheuk Wing-hing joined the Police Force in 1981 as an Inspector, and was transferred to the administrative grade in 1984. He worked in the former City and New Territories Administration, the London Economic and Trade Office, the Department of Health, the former Industry Department, the Investment Dugong Department, the Food and Environmental Hygiene Department, etc. He has worked in various departments, serving as the Director of Food and Environmental Hygiene in 2007, the Commissioner for Labour in 2010, the Administrative Commissioner for the Department of Justice in 2014, and the first Permanent Secretary for Innovation and Technology in 2015.

Zhuo Yongxing retired in 2019 and was appointed as the director of the Dialogue Office in less than three months to organize communication with the public under the turmoil of the amendment bill.

In 2021, he was invited by the Financial Secretary, Chan Mao-po, to serve as a consultant to the Financial Secretary's Office under the non-civil service contract.

Chen Maobo.

(Photo by the Information Services Department)

Financial Secretary Chan Mao-po (remaining post)

In 2008, Chen Maobo became a member of the Legislative Council in the accounting sector. In 2012, he became the Secretary for Development. In January 2017, he was nominated as the Financial Secretary. Later, he transitioned to the Lam Cheng Yuet-ngor government and served as the Financial Secretary during the Lam Cheng government term.

Wong Wai Lun.

(File photo/Photo by Li Zetong)

Deputy Financial Secretary Wong Wai Lun (former Secretary for Development)

Wong Wai-lun joined the government in 1985 and became the Administrative Officer. In 2009, he became the Director of Information Services, and in 2014, he was transferred to the Marine Department. He was the first Director of Marine Affairs to be transferred to the Marine Department from outside after the Lamma shipwreck.

In 2015, Wong Wai Lun was appointed as the Permanent Secretary of the Development Bureau and was promoted to the Secretary for Development in 2017.

Lin Dingguo.

(file picture)

Secretary for Justice Lam Ting-kwok (Former Chairman of the Bar Association)

Lim Ting Kwok became a barrister in 1992, was appointed SC in 2013, was Vice-Chairman of the Bar Association from 2014 to 2017, and was elected Chairman of the Bar Association in 2017.

In 2019, Lin Dingguo served as the chairman of the Appointee Committee and a member of the IPCC.

After 2015, Lin Dingguo was appointed as a deputy judge of the Court of First Instance of the High Court. He tried a retired pastor's property dispute case. During the trial of the case, the female major involved sent a private email to Lin Dingguo to plead for mercy on his behalf. Lin Dingguo finally decided not to. To try the case again in order to maintain the public's confidence in the judicial system, it also means that the development of the incident is completely beyond expectations and control.

Zhang Guojun.

(file picture)

Deputy Secretary for Justice Cheung Kwok-kwan (DAB Legislative Council Member and Executive Council Member)

Zhang Guojun is a practicing lawyer and the first chairman of the Youth Democratic Alliance for Betterment of Hong Kong. He has been a member of the Central and Western District since 2012 and was elected to the Legislative Council in 2016.

He has been the Deputy Chairman of the DAB since 2009 and was appointed as a member of the Executive Council in 2017.

Director:

Deng Bingqiang.

(File photo/Photo by Liao Yanxiong)

Secretary for Security Tang Ping-keung (remaining post)

Tang Bingqiang became a trainee inspector in 1987, was promoted to Assistant Commissioner of Police in 2015, was appointed Deputy Commissioner of Police in 2018, and succeeded Lo Wai-chung as Commissioner of Police in 2019.

In June 2021, he was appointed as the Secretary for Security.

Zeng Guowei.

(file picture)

Secretary for Constitutional and Mainland Affairs, Mr Tsang Kwok-wai (remaining post)

Zeng Guowei joined the Assistant Immigration Officer in 1987, was seconded to the Security Bureau as Assistant Secretary-General from 2003 to 2006, worked in the Beijing Office from 2007 to 2010, and became the Chief Immigration Officer in 2009.

In 2014, Tsang Kwok-wai was promoted to Deputy Director of Immigration and appointed as Director of Immigration in 2016.

In April 2020, Tsang Kwok-wai was appointed as the Secretary for Constitutional and Mainland Affairs, responsible for the election of the Legislative Council and the election of the Chief Executive.

Xu Zhengyu.

(file picture)

Secretary for Financial Services and the Treasury Hui Zhengyu (remaining post)

Xu Zhengyu, a member of the DAB, served as the Administrative Officer from 1999 to 2003. In 2003, he transferred to the banking industry and worked for the Hong Kong Stock Exchange. In 2019, he became the Executive Director of the Hong Kong Financial Services Development Council, and in 2020, he served as the Secretary for Financial Services and the Treasury.

Xie Zhanhuan.

(File photo/Photo by Huang Weimin)

The Secretary for the Environment and Ecology, Mr Tse Chin-wan (former Deputy Secretary for the Environment)

Xie Zhanhuan joined the Department of Environmental Protection in 1985 and became the Director of Environmental Protection. In 1996, he was promoted to Assistant Director of the Environmental Protection Department. Since 2013, he has been appointed as the Deputy Director of the Environmental Protection Department. Since 2017, he has been the Deputy Director of the Environment Bureau.

Ning Hanhao.

(Screenshot of the video of the Development Bureau)

Ning Hon-ho, Secretary for Development (Former Permanent Secretary for Development)

Ning Hanhao joined the government in 1989 and has served in various departments including the City and New Territories Administration, Civil Service Branch, and the Treasury Bureau. In 2008, he was transferred to the Chief Executive's private secretary.

In 2012, Ning Hanhao was appointed as the Director of Lands Department.

In 2017, Ning Hanhao was appointed as the Permanent Secretary of the Development Bureau.

Cai Ruolin.

(file picture)

Director of the Education Bureau Cai Ruolin (former Deputy Director of the Education Bureau)

Cai Ruolin once worked in the Education Bureau. She promoted "General Education" when she was the Senior Curriculum Director of the Education Bureau in 2012. From 2013 to 2017, she was the principal of Fujian Middle School (Xiao Xiwan). She once said that the school would raise the national flag every week to train students to be more Chinese heart, she also served as the vice-chairman of the Federation of Churches.

Cai Ruolian lost in the Legislative Council election in June 2016, and in November 2016, she participated in the election of the Election Committee for the education sector and also lost the election.

After the Lam Cheng Yuet-ngor government took office in 2017, Cai Ruolin was appointed as the deputy director of the Education Bureau.

Lu Chongmao.

(File photo/Photo by Liang Pengwei)

Secretary for Medical and Health, Lo Chongmao (Dean, University of Hong Kong Shenzhen Hospital)

Lu Chongmao is an authority on liver transplantation and the director of the Liver Transplantation Center of Queen Mary Hospital. He proposed a new technology for liver transplantation and greatly improved the survival rate of patients. In 2016, he was appointed as the Dean of the Shenzhen Medical College of the University of Hong Kong.

During the Occupy Central period in 2014, Lu Chongmao used white blood cells as a metaphor for political reform on a radio program, believing that "universal suffrage does not have international standards", and calling for support for the political reform plan is equivalent to "hospitalism first" if you are sick.

In February of this year, Lu Chongmao said that Hong Kong should insist on "clearing" and that "coexistence with the virus" was the slogan put forward by European and American countries after the failure of the fight against the epidemic. "

Sun Dong.

(File photo/Photo by Yu Junliang)

Secretary for Innovation, Technology and Industry, Mr Sun Tung (Member of the Legislative Council for the electoral sector)

Sun Dong was born in Beijing. He studied for a doctorate in robotics and automation at the Chinese University of China in 1994, and then studied at the University of Toronto in Canada. He is currently a chair professor of the Department of Biomedical Engineering at City University and a researcher in robotics and automation at the Shenzhen Research Institute of City University. Director of the Centre.

In the 2021 Legislative Council election, Sun Dong was elected in the electoral committee sector.

Mai Meijuan.

(file picture)

Secretary for Home Affairs and Youth, Mak Mei-juan (Member of the Legislative Council of the Federation of Trade Unions)

The Federation of Trade Unions, Mak Meijuan, started her work in the district. She was appointed as a Kwai Tsing District Councillor as early as 1993. She was elected as a Kwai Tsing District Councillor in 1994. Kwai Tsing can be said to be Mak Meijuan's "Old Nest".

Mak Meijuan served as an assistant to the then Legislative Council member Zhu Youlin from 1995 to 2004, and as a campaign assistant for Tung Chee-hwa's campaign office from 2001 to 2002. In 2012, she was elected to the New Territories West on the trade union list, and was successfully elected. Pay attention to the life of grassroots citizens, and serve as the vice president of the Federation of Trade Unions from March 2021.

Yang Runxiong.

(file picture)

Director of Culture, Sports and Tourism Yang Runxiong (former Director of Education Bureau)

Yang Runxiong joined the government in 1992 as an administrative director. He has served in the Food and Health Bureau, the Home Affairs Bureau, and the Sydney Economic and Trade Office. In 2012, he became the deputy director of the Education Bureau.

During his tenure as Deputy Director, he dealt with the 2015 Hong Kong-wide system evaluation turmoil, and was promoted to Secretary for Education in 2017. During this period, the Education Bureau revised the statement "China insists on taking back Hong Kong's sovereignty" in the middle school history textbook, which caused controversy.

In the 2019 amendment incident, the Education Bureau investigated a number of complaints involving teachers’ professional ethics. Yang Runxiong said in an interview from the mainland that if the school believes that the teacher involved is not a problem, the authorities can handle it from a management perspective and can cancel the qualification of the principal, but emphasizes the exercise of power. Very cautious.

In 2020, Yang Runxiong responded to the deletion of "separation of powers" from the general education textbook, saying that Hong Kong does not have a separation of powers system before or after the handover of sovereignty.

Sun Yuhan.

(Screenshot of the live broadcast of the Legislative Council)

Secretary for Labour and Welfare Sun Yuk-han (former Commissioner for Labour)

Sun Yuk-han joined the government in 1994 and worked in the Cultural and Recreational Broadcasting Branch, the Commerce and Industry Branch, the Finance Branch, the Constitutional Affairs Bureau, the Treasury Bureau, the Home Affairs Department, the Home Affairs Bureau, the Civil Service Bureau and the Food and Health Bureau. Deputy Secretary for Food and Health, appointed Director of Medical Planning and Development Coordination in 2012, Deputy Secretary for Financial Services and the Treasury in 2017, and appointed Commissioner for Labour in December 2020.

During his tenure as the Commissioner for Labour, in addition to dealing with general labor employment issues, he also had to deal with special situations arising from the epidemic, such as arrangements for employees to be absent from work due to quarantine orders.

Yang He Beiyin.

(Screenshot of Educational Television of the Education Bureau)

Secretary for the Civil Service, Ms Yeung Ho Pei-yin (former Permanent Secretary for the Civil Service)

Yeung Ho Pei-yin joined the government in 1986 as an executive officer. In 1988, she was transferred to the administrative grade. She has worked in various departments including the City and New Territories Administration, the Constitutional Affairs Branch, the Department of Health, the Security Branch, the Home Affairs Department and the Environment and Food Bureau. .

In 2005, Yang Ho Pei Yin was appointed as Deputy Secretary for Health, Welfare and Food Bureau, and in 2008, she was appointed as Deputy Secretary for Civil Service Bureau. In 2012, she was appointed as Commissioner for Transport. Permanent Secretary.

He Yongxian.

(File photo/Photo by Golden Chess)

Secretary for Housing Ho Wing-yin (former Director of Architectural Services)

Ho Wing-yin joined the government as an architect in 1992, was promoted to chief architect in 2009, and became a government architect in 2012. In the same year, he served as the deputy commissioner of the "Energizing Kowloon East" office of the Development Bureau, promoting the renewal of Kowloon East.

In 2018, he became the Deputy Director of Architectural Services, and in December 2020, he became the Director of Architectural Services.

"Energizing Kowloon East" is the government's plan to develop Kowloon East on a large scale since 2012, including improving street green belts, setting up Kwun Tong Waterfront Promenade, Kai Tak Runway Park, etc. There are many Tu Ya art creations in the back lanes of the district, which also It is the result of "Activating Kowloon East", and the long-term goal is to transform Kowloon East into a core business district.

Qiu Yinghua.

(Cathay Pacific website)

Qiu Yinghua, Secretary for Commerce and Economic Development (former Director and Chief Executive Officer of Greater Bay Area Airlines)

Qiu Yinghua joined Cathay Pacific in 1982 and has managed Cathay Pacific Catering Services, Hong Kong Airport Ground Handling and other related companies. In 2015, he was appointed as the Chief Executive Officer of Cathay Dragon.

Yau Yinghua was appointed as Cathay Pacific Airline Services Director in 2017, responsible for managing national airport affairs, air services, air freight services, customer relations, planning and international affairs.

In January 2021, Qiu Yinghua will serve as the director and chief executive officer of the Greater Bay Area Airlines, and will organize the establishment of the Greater Bay Area Airlines and be responsible for the overall operation.

Yau Yinghua participated in the 2016 Legislative Council shipping and transportation sector election and lost to the current Member, Yi Zhiming.

Lin Shixiong.

(File photo/Photo by Lin Ruoqin)

Secretary for Transport and Logistics Lam Sai-hung (Former Permanent Secretary for Development)

Lin Shixiong joined the government in 1986 as an assistant engineer, was promoted to chief engineer in 2009, became a government engineer in 2021, and was promoted to chief government engineer in 2014.

From 2015 to 2016, Lin Shih-hung served as the Director of the Hong Kong Island and Outlying Islands Development Division of the Civil Engineering and Development Department. In September 2016, he served as the Director of the Civil Engineering and Development Department. In October 2018, he became the Permanent Secretary of the Development Bureau. He will retire in October 2021.

He participated in the construction of the Ting Kau Bridge in the 1990s, and during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2000, he built a temporary hospital and quarantine facility using the assembly method.

Li Jiachao's team has two reasons: AO and professional grades and political dismantling

Source: hk1

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