vested
Exclusive: Hong Kong probes $2.5 million payment in Kwok case: source By David Lague
HONG KONG (Reuters) - Hong Kong's anti-graft agency is looking into payments totaling more than U.S. $2.5 million to a former top public servant as part of the city's corruption investigation involving two billionaire brothers who run Asia's largest property developer.
Hui and the Kwok brothers were arrested on suspicion of corruption on March 29 and released on bail without charges being filed. The three men, friends since childhood through Macau family connections, have been ordered to report back to ICAC headquarters later next month, when they are expected to extend their bail agreement, the source said.
In 2005, he declined to move into the colonial mansion on Victoria Peak reserved for the chief secretary, opting to stay instead in his modern, 5,000-square-foot apartment. The luxury flat overlooking the Happy Valley racecourse that he and his wife call home is in the Leighton Hill complex, a Sun Hung Kai development.
That prompted criticism at the time that Hui would be conflicted in his public role on any matters related to the Kwoks. On taking office, Hui pledged to pay HK$160,000 ($20,600) per month in rent to remain in the apartment.
As chief secretary, Hui's connections with Sun Hung Kai came under public scrutiny after he took on the role of overseeing Hong Kong's billion-dollar West Kowloon cultural district, a project on which the company had bid.
Hui, whose nickname is "King Strategist", provided both political and business advice to Sun Hung Kai over the years, a boon for a developer in a city where the government controls the land supply. He was also trusted by the Kwoks' mother, according to sources close to the family.
"He's a very smart guy with many tricks, with a great grasp of details and flexibility," said James To, a democratic lawmaker, who has dealt regularly with Hui over 20 years of public service.
Upon completion of its investigation, the ICAC will send the evidence to Hong Kong's justice department, which then decides if it will prosecute.
http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/04/ ... IZ20120424