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Self-made man to rule over Hong Kong's tycoons
by Staff Writers
Hong Kong (AFP) March 25, 2012

Leung wins Hong Kong election: official count
Hong Kong (AFP) March 25, 2012 - Former government adviser and property consultant Leung Chun-ying won Hong Kong's leadership election on Sunday, according to official results.

Leung, 57, will replace outgoing chief executive Donald Tsang in June after winning 689 of the votes from the 1,200-strong election committee that chooses the southern Chinese city's leader.

Applause broke out from delegates on the floor of the tally room as his count ticked past the 601 minimum required for victory.

His main rival, Henry Tang, finished with 285 and pro-democracy candidate Albert Ho on 76, an official said.

Thousands of protesters gathered outside the harbourside convention centre where the vote took place, demanding full democracy in the semi-autonomous former British colony, which returned to Chinese rule in 1997.

The protests, which could be heard inside the tally room, were noisy but generally peaceful.

Leung, whose humble origins as a policemen's son stand in stark contrast to Tang's background as heir to a textile fortune, told reporters earlier that he wanted the broadest possible community support.

"Every resident has their own view about the election. I will try my best to get rid of people's negative perception about this election," he said.


Hong Kong's incoming leader, Leung Chun-Ying, is the son of a policeman who carved out a fortune from real estate before entering politics as a relative outsider.

Born in 1954, Leung is known as a self-made property consultant and, most recently, as the soft-spoken convener of the Executive Council, the city's top policy-making body.

His family hails from China's eastern Shandong province but he proudly claims to be born and bred in Hong Kong, the Cantonese-speaking former British colony which was reunited with China in 1997.

Better known by the initials CY, the 57-year-old studied surveying in Hong Kong and real estate management in Britain before returning to his home town in 1977 and joining the local office of global property firm Jones Lang Wootton.

He rose to become one of the most well-known figures in the city's influential property sector, as Asia-Pacific chairman of real estate advisory firm DTZ Holdings, and today has an array of business directorships.

At just 34 years of age, Leung was named secretary general of the high-powered Basic Law Consultative Committee, tasked with drafting the city's constitution after its return to Chinese rule.

That appointment led to persistent allegations that he is a secret member of the Chinese Communist Party, a suggestion he repeatedly denied through his election campaign.

Two years after the handover he was appointed as convenor of the Executive Council, a role that saw him advise governments on the big decisions of the day.

He stepped down in September last year to run for the post of chief executive against a man most observers saw as a shoo-in for the job, business and government insider Henry Tang.

The son of a Shanghai textile baron, Tang was considered to have the backing of Beijing and the city's powerful business tycoons, who together dominate the election committee that decides the chief executive election.

But his more confident style and populist proposals -- including promises to address corruption, the wealth gap and soaring housing prices -- put him well ahead of Tang in terms of popular approval ratings.

He watched calmly as Tang's campaign imploded in a series of verbal gaffes and personal scandals, which helped to overshadow questions about his own background and alleged conflict of interest in a property deal.

Beijing did not openly switch sides, but when the committee met on Sunday it was Leung who won the majority of its 1,200 members.

In a victory speech on Sunday, he promised to reunite Hong Kong after the most divisive election in its history.

"From today onwards, there is no Tang camp or Leung camp, there is only one Hong Kong camp, all Hong Kong people are in this camp. I need the support from everyone to work together," Leung said.

He also said he would "pave the way for enhanced democracy with an open and fair election system" in 2017, when Beijing has promised all citizens will be entitled to vote for chief executive from a vetted group of candidates.

Leung, who is married with three teenage children, says he finds gardening "therapeutic", loves hiking and football, and swims every night at his private pool.

Leung's five-year term starts in July after outgoing Chief Executive Donald Tsang's term expires.

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China congratulates new Hong Kong leader
Beijing (AFP) March 25, 2012 - China on Sunday congratulated Leung Chun-ying after he was selected by a pro-Beijing committee to be Hong Kong's new leader, and said the election followed the law.

"This election of chief executive was in accordance with the Basic Law and the election law of the Special Administrative Region of Hong Kong," the Xinhua news agency quoted a Chinese government official in Hong Kong as saying.

The Basic Law serves as the mini-constitution for Hong Kong, which returned to Chinese from British rule in 1997.

The official of the Liaison Office of the Central People's Government in Hong Kong, who was not named, congratulated the self-made millionaire property consultant and expressed confidence in his leadership.

"After Mr. Leung Chun-ying takes office as chief executive he will definitely lead the government of the Special Administrative Region to unite all circles of society," the official said.

The liaison office functions as China's main representation in Hong Kong.

The official also said he hoped Leung would develop Hong Kong's economy and improve the livelihood of Hong Kong people.

In his victory speech, Leung promised to "reunite" Hong Kong and protect its "rights and freedoms" following an election which split the city's establishment camp and forced Beijing to heed popular opinion as never before.

Leung, 57, will replace outgoing Chief Executive Donald Tsang in July after winning 689 of the votes from the 1,200-strong election committee, according to an official count.



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