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| Premier Wen Jiabao signed the
appointment decree for Donald Tsang as new Chief Executive of HK SAR at
the plenary meeting of the State Council on Tuesday June 21,
2005. |
BEIJING, June 21 (Xinhuanet) -- The State Council, or
the Chinese central government, held here Tuesday a special meeting to appoint
Donald Tsang, 60, as new Chief Executive of the Hong Kong Special Administrative
Region (HKSAR).
Premier Wen Jiabao signed the appointment decree at
the plenary meeting. According to the Basic law of Hong Kong, Tsang should
assume his CE office on June 21 and his term will expire by June 30, 2007.
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| Hong Kong's new leader Donald
Tsang speaks during a press conference in Hong Kong June 16,
2005 (Xinhua) | Tsang
resigned from the position as chief secretary of the HKSAR on May 25 to run for
the CE by-election and won on June 16 supported by 714 members of the Election
Committee.
Before that, the central government had approved Tung
Chee-hwa's request for resignation as the HKSAR Chief Executive for health
reasons on March 12, with Tsang then serving as acting CE in line with related
regulations.
The plenum reviewed two reports, one on the final result of the CE by-election by HKSAR and the other one on how the candidates were selected by the Hong Kong and Macao Affairs Office of the State Council.
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| Henry Tang Ying-yen (Front), acting chief executive of Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR), speaks during a ceremony held at the HKSAR government headquarters in Hong Kong, south China, June 21, 2005. Henry Tang congratulated Donald Tsang Yam-kuen on his appointment by the Chinese central government as the new HKSAR chief executive. (Xinhua Photo) |
"The fact that Mr. Tsang was nominated and supported
by 714 members of the Election Committee and then won as the electee shows that
he enjoys extensive recognition and support from various walks of life in Hong
Kong," said Wen.
Wen said he believes Tsang and his government could
lead the Hong Kong people to overcome all the difficulties they may come across
in the future and thus reap greater achievements in promoting prosperity and
stability in Hong Kong.
He praised Tsang, when formerly serving as financial
and chief secretaries of Hong Kong SAR, as having contributed much to
safeguarding the "one country, two systems" principle and the Basic Law and
keeping the city's prosperity and stability.
"Mr. Tsang exhibits relatively strong capabilities in
administrative management," he said, citing that Tsang is familiar with the
situations in various circles of Hong Kong and government work since he has
worked in the Hong Kong government for more than 30 years.
Wen said the by-election has embodied the principles
of openness, fairness and justice since it's fully in line with both the Basic
Law and Hong Kong's regulations on CE election.
Also present at the meeting were vice premiers of
Huang Ju, Wu Yi, Zeng Peiyan and state councilors of Zhou Yongkang, Cao
Gangchuan, Tang Jiaxuan, Hua Jianmin, Chen Zhili and other membersof the plenum.
Enditem
Backgrounder: Biography of Donald Tsang, new
Chief Executive of Hong Kong |