Hong Kong investors and listed companies wage a war of independence – over board directors
On a Sunday night in June 2019, Abraham Razack faced a dilemma. The images he saw on TV news earlier that day unsettled him.
Razack, who is now 79, felt that the unprecedented demonstrative outpouring by the city’s residents was the beginning of something that “would not end any time soon, and it was set to hurt the economy”, he said last week in an interview with the Post.
Sure enough, that Sunday was the beginning of several months of protests – occasionally violent, some requiring police intervention – that kicked off Hong Kong’s descent into the economic doldrums. What followed was three years of the Covid-19 pandemic, which exacerbated the economic malaise. And Hong Kong has still yet to fully recover.