新華網點名批富豪文
新華社今日報道指,早前訪京的一眾本港富豪,包括長和主席李嘉誠、恒基主席李兆基、嘉里主席郭鶴年及九倉主席吳光正仍對佔中仍未表態。
網站紀錄顯示,報道已經被新華網刪除,但在其他一些內地網站,如中國網,則仍然可以看到題為《Hong Kong tycoons reluctant to take side amid
Occupy turmoil》的報道。
該英文報道以記者署名方式發表,首先提及政協副主席兼前特首董建華昨天會見傳媒,再次呼籲結束佔領行動。而在佔領行動爆發前一個星期,董率領富豪團訪京,會見習近平。習近平在會上要求富豪們要團結一致,為在中央和特區政府領導下的香港合力創造更美好的未來。
報道指出,董是香港少數幾位富豪表明反對這場持續一個月的運動,當日會見習近平時坐在董旁邊的李嘉誠,在10月15日發過聲明,呼籲示威者回家,「懇請大家不要讓今天的激情,變成明天的遺憾」。不過,這位亞洲首富卻未明確表示到底否同意示威者的訴求。至於其他香港大亨,包括李兆基、郭鶴年、吳光正等全都保持沉默,又指出,在會見習近平的富豪中,只有董建華在昨天的記者會上清楚表明支持香港警方處理示威和梁振英政府,其他人都沒這樣做。
Hong Kong tycoons reluctant to take side amid Occupy
turmoil
By Yan Hao (Xinhua)
HONG KONG, Oct. 25
-- Former Hong Kong chief executive Tung Chee-hwa on Friday urged once
again protesters to end their Occupy Central movement since thousands of students
started sit-in protests on Sept. 28 over the region's next top leader's
election in 2017.
Sworn in as the first chief executive in 1997 right after the former
British colony was handed over to China, the 77-year-old Tung now serves as
vice chairman of the National Committee of the Chinese People's Political
Consultative Conference, China's top political advisory body, who is the only
state-level leader in the special administrative region.
One week before the Occupy movement, Tung led a high-profile
billionaires delegationrepresenting Hong Kong's industrial and business
communities to Beijing and met with President Xi Jinping.
At that meeting, President Xi asked the Hong Kong billionaires to
"be united and make concerted efforts to jointly create an even brighter
future for Hong Kong led by the central government as well as the region's
chief executive and government."
Tung is among the few tycoons in Hong Kong who have voiced opposition to
the almostmonth-long movement that has severely disrupted traffic in the city
and affected the daily lives of Hong Kongers.
"My fellow students, I have heard your appeals for more democracy
and agree with the ultimate goal. Who does not want a more democratic
society?" Tung said in the former chief executive' s official mansion.
"In civilized societies, conflicts are resolved through dialogue,
not in streets. Students should not use the occupation as bargaining chips for
negotiation with the government."
In fact, Tung himself was also a businessman. Born in Shanghai, Tung
took over his family business after his father, shipping magnate Tung Chao
Yung, died in 1981 and managed Orient Overseas, one of the world's leading
shipping and logistics service providers.
Sitting next to Tung at the meeting with President Xi was Li Ka- shing
who made a statement on Oct. 15, calling on the Occupy protesters to go home
and not to "let today's passion become tomorrow's regrets." The
Asia's wealthiest man did not make it clear whether or not he agrees with the
appeals of the protesters.
Li built his family business empire from plastics manufacturing and
accumulated wealth through real estate, supermarket chains and mobile phone
network.
Other Hong Kong tycoons, such as Lee Shau-kee, nicknamed "Hong
Kong's Warrenn Buffett," Kuok Hock Nien known for his sugar refineries in
Asia, and Woo Kwong-ching whose businesses range from Hong Kong's cable TV to the
Star Ferry, have all remained mute.
Except for Tung who made himself clear at Friday's press conference,
none of the tycoonsat President Xi's meeting has expressed support to the
police's handling of the demonstrations and Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying's
government.
However, many small business owners and taxi drivers flared up at the
protesters and their attempts to remove the barricades in Mong Kok, a
commercial district in Kowloon, led to clashes with the demonstrators.
Hong Kong, with a 7-million population and just one-sixth the size of
the mainland's metropolis Shanghai, has ranked the world's 7th in terms of GDP
per capita at purchasing power parity, according to the International Monetary
Fund.
The city also has one of the largest income disparities in the world
with its Gini index, the most commonly used measure of inequality, rose to a
record-high 0.537 in 2011.
Many Occupy protesters said one of the reasons for their "
hopeless" lives which theybelieve need more democracy, is that they are
dismayed by various livelihood woes, for instance, an unaffordable housing
price.
About 1.3 million Hong Kongers, or 19.6 percent of the population, live
below a poverty line of 11,500 Hong Kong dollars (1,483.5 U.S. dollars) for a
three-member household per month, which was set by the Hong Kong government
last year.
The threshold, drawn at half of Hong Kong's median monthly household
income before tax and welfare transfers, is way behind the average housing
price, around 3,000 U.S. dollars per square foot.
Despite continued preferential economic policies given by China 's
central government to the Asian financial hub since 1997, a sentiment simmers
among Hong Kong's blue-collarclass that they benefited much less from those
policies than the industrial and business elites.
One of the key demands of the Occupy protesters is to introduce
"civil nomination" in choosing candidates for the next chief
executive before all Hong Kong's eligible voters cast their ballots in 2017.
According to China's top legislature's decision on Aug. 31, the
committee tasked with nominating two to three candidates for the next leader
will be a 1,200-member panel similar to the one which elected incumbent Chief
Executive Leung, but protesters said it lacks legitimacy for the planned
universal suffrage.
The protesters also vented their anger at the Hong Kong police' s use of
tear gas to disperse protesters on Sept. 28 and Leung's report to the top
legislature, which they think was misleading Beijing on Hong Kongers' real
demands on the universal suffrage.
Leung said during an interview with foreign media on Tuesday that there
was still room to make the nomination committee more democratic, such as
replacing corporate votes with individual ballots.
If so, more grassroots employees, rather than their bosses, would have a
say in nominating chief executive candidates who will run for the 2017 vote.
Days later, James Tien, leader of the pro-business Liberal Party, said
that Chief Executive Leung should consider stepping down not for his policies
but the growing difficulties for governance.
Tien is the first major figure from the pro-establishment camp to
publicly suggest Leung's resignation during the Occupy movement. Being a
successful boss in clothing and real estate, he is the first son of Hong Kong
late textile industry's magnate Tien Yuan- hao.
(Editor:Zhang Qian、Bianji)
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