The Limited Times

Now you can see non-English news...

Executive Council declaration of interests Liu Yeqiang holds more than 400 pieces of land

2022-08-11T09:38:56.984Z


The government published the register of personal interests of Executive Council members. Unofficial member and chairman of Heung Yee Kuk, Lau Yip-keung, declared that he held 456 pieces of land in Hong Kong and became a "guild big landlord". Li Guozhang, former chairman of the University Council of Hong Kong, holds


The government published the register of personal interests of Executive Council members. Unofficial member and chairman of Heung Yee Kuk, Lau Yip-keung, declared that he held 456 pieces of land in Hong Kong and became a "guild big landlord".

Li Guozhang, the former chairman of the Hong Kong University Council, holds more than 40 properties, including two self-use properties in the W2 district of London, England.


In addition to Li Guozhang, many non-official members also hold overseas properties. For example, "Public Officer King" Cheng Muzhi holds two properties in London for rent; Leung Ko Mei-yi, the former CEO of Hang Seng Bank, holds a property in Sydney, Australia , is also used for rental; Chen Qingxia, a member of the National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, holds two residential units in Toronto, Canada.


Liu Yip-keung, chairman of Heung Yee Kuk, New Territories.

(file picture)

Lau Ye Keung has 353 parcels of land and a number of properties in Tuen Mun

Lau declared to hold more than 400 properties and lands, including 353 pieces of land in Tuen Mun, 55 pieces of land in Yuen Long, 43 pieces of land in North District, 4 pieces of land in Lantau Island and 1 piece of land in Tai Po, which were used for lease or vacancy respectively.

He holds a 7-unit residential property in Tuen Mun District for self-use, another 6 residential properties in Tuen Mun and 2 residential properties in Yuen Long for rent, and also holds a storefront, a commercial property and 3 stores in Tuen Mun Property for own use and rental.

He also holds a vacant factory site in Hubei and Huizhou respectively.

Looking through Liu Yeqiang's personal interest register in 2017, Liu Yeqiang held only 14 pieces of land in Tuen Mun District in Hong Kong at that time.

Subsequently, he inherited the estate of his father Liu Huangfa, and the amount of land held by Liu also skyrocketed, making him the best of the guild.

Li Guozhang holds 44 properties.

(file picture)

Li Guozhang holds a total of 44 properties

Li Guozhang declared a total of 44 properties held in the name of individuals and companies, including 11 properties in the Central and Western District, 6 properties in Wanchai and 4 properties in the Southern District.

He also holds 16 parking spaces and 1 motorcycle parking space.

As for the new members of the guild, Cheng Muzhi holds 3 properties in the Central and Western District, two of which are for lease.

Leung Ko Mei Yi holds two properties for self-use in Wan Chai and three parking spaces in Yau Tsim Mong for rent.

Chen Jianbo owns 4 residential properties and 4 parking spaces in the southern district, 3 of which are for his own use.

In addition, he owns a commercial unit for rental purposes in the Central and Western District, and a residential property for self-use in Shenzhen.

Chen Qingxia owns 1 unit in Mid-Levels and 1 shop in Kwun Tong District.

Gao Yongwen only holds one self-occupied property in Kowloon City.

The guild made a public declaration of interest, Xu Zhengyu became a high-ranking official, "The King of Buildings", an official who holds the permanent secretary of the Environment Bureau of the Overseas Off-the-plan property, and Xie Xiaohua holds 18 units and 9 parking spaces.

Source: hk1

All news articles on 2022-08-11

You may like

News/Politics 2024-02-11T20:43:30.604Z

Trends 24h

News/Politics 2024-03-28T06:04:53.137Z

Latest

© Communities 2019 - Privacy

The information on this site is from external sources that are not under our control.
The inclusion of any links does not necessarily imply a recommendation or endorse the views expressed within them.