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Lam Woon kwong

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Appointed by
  
Leung Chun-ying

Succeeded by
  
John Tsang

Preceded by
  
Ronald Arculli

Preceded by
  
David Lan


Preceded by
  
Raymond Tang

Name
  
Lam Woon-kwong

Succeeded by
  
York Chow

Role
  
Politician

Lam Woon-kwong httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Education
  
University of Hong Kong, Queen's College, Hong Kong, Harvard University

06-12-2013 Class 74 Gathering (Lam Woon Kwong Speech)


Lam Woon-kwong GBS JP is a Hong Kong politician and civil servant. He has worked as Convenor of the Executive Council and Chairperson of the Equal Opportunities Commission.

Contents

Lam Woon-kwong Lam Woonkwong Wikipedia

Early years

Lam Woon-kwong Lam WoonKwong South China Morning Post

Lam Woon-kwong was born in 1951. He graduated from the Social Sciences Faculty of the University of Hong Kong with a Bachelor of Social Sciences in Economics and Sociology. He has two master's degrees: in Public Administration from Harvard University and in Buddhist Studies from the University of Hong Kong.

In government

Lam benefited from a meteoric rise midway through his civil service career (around the time of the Handover) due to the early retirement of many of Her Majesty's Overseas Civil Service officers and the local senior civil servants expected to fill their roles. Promoted thrice between 1993 and 1996, Lam became one of many junior officers who rose swiftly through the ranks. Speaking to the Standard in 1995, even he admitted his surprise.

Lam served as Director of Education for just nine months. He was appointed Secretary for the Civil Service by Governor Patten in 1996, the first to be promoted, rather than transferred, into the role. While there, he pushed through reforms despite significant opposition from unions. He was Secretary for Home Affairs from July 2000 to June 2002.

Lam became Director of the Chief Executive's Office of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region for Tung Chee Hwa in July 2002. In January 2005, women's magazine Sudden Weekly (Issue 493) carried a story that included photographs of Lam with a woman outside a hotel in Tokyo and an interview with his wife of nearly 30 years. Lam resigned on the same evening, saying, "in view of the media report on my private affairs, I tendered my resignation to the chief executive today".

He became Chairperson of the Equal Opportunities Commission in February 2010. In July 2012, upon his appointment as Convenor of the Executive Council for the new Chief Executive, CY Leung, despite public concern at a possible conflict of interest, he retained his position as Chairperson of the Equal Opportunities Commission. He was known for publicly disagreeing with Leung on occasion.

A HKU poll in 2016 rated him the most popular member of the Executive Council.

Other activities

For the 2008 Olympic Games, he was Chief Executive Officer of Olympic Equestrian Events (Hong Kong). He is a governor of the Hong Kong Philharmonic Society.

Lam has been a regular commentator at the South China Morning Post since 2012.

Awards

  • 2000: Gold Bauhinia Star
  • 2005: Justice of the Peace
  • 2009: Chief Executive's Commendation for Community Service Award
  • References

    Lam Woon-kwong Wikipedia