China | Politics in Hong Kong

Troubled leaders

A former chief executive of Hong Kong is arrested by anti-graft officials

|HONG KONG

CHINA’s record of picking leaders in Hong Kong has hardly been glorious. The current chief executive—the third since China regained the territory in 1997—is hugely unpopular. The first one resigned after a public outcry over his plans for a new security bill. Now the second, Donald Tsang Yam-kuen, who was knighted by the British but whose once-widespread support had shrivelled by the time he left office three years ago, faces possible disgrace.

Mr Tsang was arrested on October 5th following a lengthy investigation by Hong Kong’s Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC). At a magistrate’s court, where he appeared wearing his trademark bow tie (see picture), two charges were read out to him. The first was that he had failed to declare his rental of a flat in the nearby Chinese city of Shenzhen from a businessman whose applications for broadcast licences were being considered by Hong Kong’s policymakers. The other charge was that Mr Tsang had proposed an architect for a public honour without revealing that the nominee had been hired to work on the flat’s interior design.

This article appeared in the China section of the print edition under the headline "Troubled leaders"

Kill seven diseases, save 1.2m lives a year

From the October 10th 2015 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from China

How Chinese networks clean dirty money on a vast scale

These shadowy “banks” are becoming the financiers of choice for transnational criminal gangs

The dark side of growing old

A coming wave of Alzheimer’s and other forms of dementia will test China to its limits


Examining the fluff that frustrates northern China

An effort to improve the environment has had unintended consequences