Daniel Heung (香灼璣) (born
December 1943) was a Chairman of the Committee on the
Promotion of Civic Education of Hong Kong
. He is an architect and formerly a committee
member of the Town Planning Board. He is a cousin of Chief
Executive
Donald Tsang.
Heung was awarded a Silver Bauhinia Star by Donald Tsang in 2005.
Scandal
On 7
August, Heung was the centre of a scandal when the Oriental Daily News broke the story
that he had transformed a warehouse site in Shatin
which he
rented from the government in 1983 into a private residence using
his professional knowledge . It was estimated that rent
would have cost about HK$840,000 a year as residential property
instead of the annual lease payments of HK$200,000 a year over 16
years of his tenancy.
According to a briefing note for a Legislative Council meeting,
officials had inspected the site more than twelve times since 1984.
There had been eight land-use breaches, verbal and written warnings
were issued. After each warning, Heung modified the site
sufficiently to escape further censure until the next inspection.
His cousin, the Chief Executive, Donald Tsang, was also subject to
questions about his role, as Tsang was the District Officer of
Shatin at the time the lease was granted. Tsang himself admitted
having once visited, but the Chief Executive's Office denied any
impropriety, stating that Tsang took no notice of the land lease
issue when he visited his cousin's house in the late 1980s.
Heung claimed that he had moved away from that house in 1999, but
in early August 2006, a private garden, a car park and a big house
could still be found. Afterwards, Heung resigned from the chairman
of the Committee on the Promotion of Civic Education but initially
refused to give an apology. .
On 25 August, more than two weeks after the scandal broke, Heung
apologised in a statement, saying
References
- CE urged to respond to Heung home controversy
RTHK, 20 August 2006
- Jonathan Cheng, Land cons under the
spotlight, The Standard, 19
September 2006
- Jonathan Cheng, Tsang role in land scandal queried, The
Standard, 21 September 2006
- Yahoo! NewsAccessed 25 August 2006
- Yahoo! NewsAccessed 25 August 2006