- Kwoks own Hong Kong's second-biggest family fortune
- Lawyer says no charges brought despite arrest
- ICAC does not identify those arrested
HONG KONG,
March 29 (Reuters) - Hong Kong's Independent Commission Against Corruption on
Thursday arrested two senior company executives, identified in the media as Sun
Hung Kai Properties tycoon brothers Raymond and Thomas Kwok, for corruption, it
said.
The Kwoks
own $18.3 billion, the second-biggest family fortune in Hong Kong, according to
Forbes magazine, second only to Asia's richest man, Li Ka-shing, founder of
rival developer Cheung Kong (Holdings).
The ICAC
also said it had arrested a former senior government official, whom the South
China Morning Post identified as former chief secretary Rafael Hui, who has
worked as a special adviser to Sun Hung Kai.
Sun Hung
Kai said it would issue a statement shortly.
The ICAC
announced on its website that the people arrested, whom it did not identify,
were "alleged to have committed offences under the Prevention of Bribery
Ordinance and misconduct in public office".
"Two
senior executives of a listed company in Hong Kong and a former principal
official of the Hong Kong Government have been arrested for suspected
corruption," the ICAC said in a statement.
Gary
Plowman, a former government prosecutor, said he had been to the ICAC and was
representing one of the arrested parties whom he declined to identify.
"Nobody
has been charged," Plowman said. As for what happened next, that was
"a very good question".
"We
react, we're not proactive. We are reactive in these situations," he said.
The ICAC
was set up in 1974 to root out what was seen as widespread corruption in the
Hong Kong government at the time, especially in the police.
It acts as
a law-enforcement agency, able to arrest and detain suspects, and prosecutes
cases in conjunction with advice from the Department of Justice.
Steve
Vickers, former commander of the police Criminal Intelligence Bureau and now
CEO of a risk and security consulting company, said the timing of the case was
interesting, in the context of popular sentiment against property developers
and rising house prices.
"These
cases are notoriously difficult to prosecute," he said. "It will be
interesting to see whether charges emerge or not."
The ICAC
said another senior executive of the unnamed listed company and four others
were arrested at an earlier date in connection with the case.
ARRIVAL BY
LIMO
Over the
past four decades, Sun Hung Kai, listed in 1972, has built some of the city's
most expensive property, including luxury hilltop apartment blocks and harbour-front
skyscrapers, including Hong Kong's tallest building, the International Commerce
Centre on the Kowloon peninsula.
The company
said 10 days ago that Thomas Chan Kui-yuen, a Sun Hung Kai Properties board
member and the executive responsible for project planning and land
acquisitions, had been arrested for suspected bribery.
Cable TV
footage on Thursday showed Raymond Kwok entering the ICAC premises in a
limousine, flanked by two unidentified men. The station also showed images of a
lawyer for Thomas Kwok going into ICAC headquarters.
It was not
clear if the suspects were being held.
Shares in
Sun Hung Kai Properties were suspended in Hong Kong on Thursday, as was trading
in two of its subsidiaries, mobile phone company SmarTone Telecommunications
and data-centre operator SUNeVision Holdings.
Raymond
Kwok is chairman of all three, the only person on the board of all the
companies suspended.
The Kwoks
took the helm at Sun Hung Kai after a bitter family feud in 2008, which ended
with eldest brother and then-chairman Walter Kwok Ping-sheung being demoted.
One
analyst, who did not want to be identified given the sensitive nature of the
issue, said any involvement of Hui, chief secretary from 2005 to 2007, suggests
the case dates back many years.
"It
has to be a very old project," the analyst said.
On
Thursday, the Hong Kong stock exchange suspended Sun Hung Kai, SmarTone
Telecommunications Holdings and SUNeVision Holdings Ltd, ahead of what the
companies said was a potentially price-sensitive announcement.
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