Honorific Prefix: | The Honourable |
Henry Fok | |
Other Names: | 霍英東 |
Office: | Vice Chairman of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference |
Term Start: | 13 March 2003 |
Term End: | 28 October 2006 |
1Blankname: | Chairman |
1Namedata: | Jia Qinglin |
Term Start1: | 27 March 1993 |
Term End1: | 13 March 1998 |
1Blankname1: | Chairman |
1Namedata1: | Jia Qinglin |
Office2: | Delegate to the National People's Congress |
Term Start2: | March 1988 |
Term End2: | March 1998 |
Constituency2: | Guangdong |
1Blankname2: | Chairman |
1Namedata2: | Wan Li Qiao Shi |
Office3: | Member of the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress |
Term Start3: | 27 April 1988 |
Term End3: | 27 March 1993 |
1Blankname3: | Chairman |
1Namedata3: | Wan Li |
Birth Name: | 霍官泰 Fok Koon Tai |
Birth Date: | 1923 5, df=yes |
Birth Place: | British Hong Kong |
Death Place: | Peking Union Medical College Hospital, Beijing, China |
Resting Place: | Hong Kong |
Spouse: | |
Children: | 10 sons and 3 daughters |
Henry Fok Ying Tung (10 May 1923 – 28 October 2006) was an entrepreneur and politician in Hong Kong. From 1993 until his death, Fok served as Vice Chairman of the National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference. He was one of the Hong Kong's wealthiest persons.
Fok was born on 10 May 1923 in Hong Kong to an ethnic Tanka family.[1] Fok's father died in a boating accident when he was just seven. He studied at Queen's College, but was not able to finish junior high due to the Japanese invasion in 1937. He worked as a labourer during that time while helping to run the family's small boat business.
After the war, he became a successful businessman. His business interests included restaurants, real estate, casinos and petroleum. Fok reportedly made his first fortune gun-running into the mainland during the Korean War in the early 1950s, circumventing a United Nations arms embargo.[2] Fok vigorously denied weapons trafficking, but admits having violated sanctions by smuggling steel and rubber as well as other items.[2]
He was the President of the Chinese General Chamber of Commerce in Hong Kong, the President of the Hong Kong Football Association, and the President of the Real Estate Developers Association of Hong Kong. He was also the Chairman of Henry Fok Estates Ltd and the Yau Wing Co of Hong Kong.
In the 1980s Fok organized the effort to bail out OOCL from bankruptcy shortly after its founder Tung Chao-yung died.[3]
In 2006, Forbes magazine listed Fok as the seventh wealthiest person in Hong Kong and the 181st in the world, with a fortune of US$3.7 billion.
Before the handover of Hong Kong in 1997, Henry Fok was a member of the Drafting Committee for the Basic Law of Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (SAR), the vice-chairman of the Preliminary Working Committee of Preparatory Committee of the Hong Kong SAR, and the vice-chairman of the Preparatory Committee of Hong Kong SAR. He was also Standing Committee member of 7th National People's Congress.
The press frequently reports that Henry Fok had introduced Tung Chee Hwa to Jiang Zemin as a possible candidate of the first Hong Kong Chief Executive.[4]
Henry Fok helped Tung Chee Hwa out of a near-bankruptcy of his family's Orient Overseas Container Line in the 1980s. Because of this relationship, it was often said while Tung was the Chief Executive of Hong Kong that Fok 'intervened/advised' if times, or rather Beijing, called for it.
Henry Fok founded the Fok Ying Tung Foundation in 1984, and it is now one of the largest philanthropic organisations in Hong Kong. Fok founded a high-technology business park in Nansha District, Guangzhou. He is said to have visited the site more than 500 times, and through the Foundation, pledged HK$800 million (US$100 million) to the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology in 2005 to support the initiative.[2] [5]
Fok's wife was Elaine Lui, and he had two concubines, Elaine Fung and Lam Sook-duen, according to the Great Qing Legal Code, which remained in force for Chinese people in Hong Kong until 1971. Among Fok's children, the best-known are:
Fok had family roots in Panyu District, Guangzhou, Guangdong.
On 28 October 2006, Fok died at the age of 83 at the Peking Union Medical College in Beijing, where he was being treated for cancer. He had been diagnosed with lymphoma in 1984 and the cancer had reappeared in 2004. His body was flown back to Hong Kong for a traditional funeral in accordance with his wishes. Fok was one of the first Hong Konger to have his casket draped in the Chinese national flag since the handover (the others being T. K. Ann and Wong Ker-lee).[6] He was posthumously awarded the Medal of Reform Pioneer.[7]