Stephen Lam Explained

Honorific-Prefix:The Honourable
Stephen Lam Sui-lung
Native Name Lang:zh-hk
Nationality:Chinese, Hong Kong
Office1:Chief Secretary for Administration
1Blankname1:Chief Executive
1Namedata1:Donald Tsang
Term Start1:30 September 2011
Term End1:30 June 2012
Predecessor1:Henry Tang
Successor1:Carrie Lam
Office2:Secretary for Constitutional and Mainland Affairs
1Blankname2:Chief Executive
1Namedata2:Tung Chee Hwa
Donald Tsang
Term Start2:1 July 2002
Term End2:30 September 2011
Predecessor2:Michael Suen (as Secretary for Constitutional Affairs)
Successor2:Raymond Tam
Birth Date:24 November 1955
Birth Place:Hong Kong
Spouse:[1] [2]
Alma Mater:University of Hong Kong (BSS)
University of London (LLB)
University of Oxford (PGDip)

Stephen Lam Sui-lung (Cantonese pronunciation: ; born 24 November 1955) was the Chief Secretary for Administration of Hong Kong and Secretary for Constitutional and Mainland Affairs.

Lam was born in Hong Kong attended Wah Yan College. He graduated from the University of Hong Kong in 1978 and then began his public service career. During his early years in the civil service he attended the University of London Law School, from which he graduated in 1983.

Career

Lam joined the Hong Kong government administrative service in October 1978. He held senior positions as Administrative Assistant to the Chief Secretary from 1989 to 1991. He was the Deputy Secretary for Constitutional Affairs from 1994 to 1996. He was the director of the Hong Kong Handover Ceremony Co-ordination Office from 1996 to 1997.[3] In this role he was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire in the Queen's Birthday Honours of 1997.[4]

After the transfer of sovereignty over Hong Kong to the People's Republic of China, he was the Director of Administration and Development in the Hong Kong Department of Justice. From July 2002 to September 2011 he was Secretary for Constitutional Affairs. Lam then replaced Henry Tang as the Chief Secretary for Administration, with nine months of the term remaining, due to Tang's resignation from the post in advance of his expected trot to the Chief Executiveship. Lam has enjoyed the lowest popularity ratings among the three key secretaries  - chief secretary, finance secretary and justice secretary  - and in May 2012 scored 37.3 points out of 100.[5]

On 5 and 6 June 2009, Lam met with Fu Don-cheng (傅棟成), Taiwan's Mainland Affairs Council deputy minister.[6] The meeting took place in Taipei to improve cooperation between Hong Kong and Taiwan trade.[7] He also met with Lai Shin-yuan, the Chairwoman of the MAC.

Lam decided to leave politics upon the expiry of his term of office on 30 June 2012;[5] He became the official with lowest opinion poll since HK SAR Government was established in 1997. After the end of his term, he went to the University of Oxford to study theology and graduated after one year.

Criticism

In July 2007 during a Legislative Council meeting, Lam was criticized by the pan-democrats for pocketing millions of dollars in government salary, while making no progress in constitutional development. Lam was dubbed “Eunuch Lam” (Chinese: 林公公) and “human recorder” (Chinese: 人肉錄音機).[8] In 2011, his alleged "manipulation" of political development – in particular, the so-called "replacement mechanism" for filling vacancies in the Legislative Council caused by resignations, led to objections to his promotion to Chief Secretary, including a protest march of more than a thousand people, led by the Civil Human Rights Front.[9]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 林瑞麟出賣初戀情人. 2002-06-28. Apple Daily (Hong Kong). 2020-07-14. zh-hk.
  2. Web site: 林瑞麟賣赤柱豪宅賺3,300萬. 2015-04-16. Apple Daily (Hong Kong). 2020-07-14. zh-hk.
  3. Gov.hk. "Mr Stephen Lam Sui-lung." Retrieved 17 June 2009.
  4. "Supplement to Issue 54794", London Gazette, 13 June 1997, p.25.
  5. Phila Siu, (7 May 2012). "Duty calls" . The Standard, page 1.
  6. The Standard HK. "The Standard.com ." Lam seals accord for closer ties with Taiwan. Retrieved 17 June 2009.
  7. News.gov.hk. ""Stephen Lam to visit Taipei". News.gov.hk Retrieved 17 June 2009.
  8. Legco.gov.hk. "Legco.gov.hk." OFFICIAL RECORD OF PROCEEDINGS. Wednesday, 11 July 2007. Retrieved 17 June 2009.
  9. http://www.rthk.org.hk/rthk/news/englishnews/news.htm?englishnews&20111010&56&789757 "Protests demand Stephen Lam resign"