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Rafael Hui had no 'concrete business' to do before chief-secretary job, court told

No 'concrete business' was apparent before chief secretary job came along

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Rafael Hui Si-yan at the High Court in Admiralty. Photo: David Wong

Ex-chief secretary Rafael Hui Si-yan did not have any "concrete business" to do over a period of nearly two years before becoming the city's No2 official, his former personal assistant said in court yesterday.

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Yesterday's hearing gave the public a glimpse into the life of Hui between his exit in August 2003 as Mandatory Provident Fund Schemes Authority managing director and his appointment as chief secretary in June 2005.

"Mr Hui did not come to the office frequently. Maybe just several hours a day," prosecution witness Wilma Yuen Wing-man testified at a high-level corruption trial involving her former boss of 31/2 years. "I was not specifically aware of any formal or concrete business."

Yuen was referring to the office of Top Faith Enterprises, a company Hui set up at One IFC. In between the two public posts, he hired Yuen and a driver.

The court earlier heard he became a consultant to Sun Hung Kai Properties in March 2004.

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Hui allegedly took tens of millions of dollars from SHKP co-chairmen Thomas Kwok Ping-kwong and Raymond Kwok Ping-luen to be the developer's "eyes and ears" in the government.

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