No separate inquiry needed to probe Hong Kong water scandal, treasury chief says

Published: 2:22pm, 24 Aug 2025Updated: 4:21pm, 24 Aug 2025

Hong Kong’s treasury chief has dismissed calls to set up a separate commission of inquiry to investigate officials’ roles in a bottled water procurement scandal, arguing that the government’s auditors will be able to identify lapses in a “professional and independent” manner.

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Secretary for Financial Services and the Treasury Christopher Hui Ching-yu, the head of a newly formed task force that is reviewing the case, on Sunday defended the adequacy of having the Audit Commission conduct the investigation, and also recommended that authorities explore the use of technology to improve scrutiny of public tenders.

Hui, who heads the bureau that oversees the Government Logistics Department, earlier said the task force would submit a report in three months’ time.

But he has faced mounting pressure over the past week to clarify officials’ roles after authorities failed to vet water supplier Xin Ding Xin Trade for allegedly defrauding the government in a HK$52.9 million (US$8.8 million) three-year contract.

On Sunday, Hui was asked by local media whether the government would establish a separate commission of inquiry to clarify accountability issues.

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Two senior officials appointed to the newly formed task force – Government Logistics Department director Carlson Chan Ka-shun and Permanent Secretary for the Financial Services and the Treasury Bureau Andrew Lai Chi-wah – are also members of the Central Tender Board that gave the final approval to the contract.

  

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