- Donald Tsang
born October 7, 1944) has been the Chief Executive of Hong Kong since 2005. A civil servant since 1967, Tsang had occupied various positions in finance and trade in the Hong Kong Civil Service, and was appointed Financial Secretary of Hong Kong in 1995, becoming the first ethnic Chinese to hold the position in the British colonial administration.
- Regina Ip
Regina Ip Lau Suk-yee, GBS, MA, MSc, M.Litt, B.A. was formerly a prominent government official of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR). She was the first woman to be appointed as Secretary for Security to head the disciplinary service. She was also the first principal official to resign from the administration of Tung Chee-hwa, former Chief Executive of Hong Kong, only one year into its operation.
- York Chow
York Chow Yat Ngok is the Secretary for Health, Welfare and Food of Hong Kong. He is a member of the Executive Council. He was appointed to his current position in 2004. Chow is an orthopaedic surgeon by profession. He was appointed Hospital Chief Executive of Queen Mary Hospital in 2001. Chow was appointed a Vice-President of the International Paralympic Committee in 1997. During his studies in The University of Hong Kong since 1967, he stayed in St.
- Arthur Li
Prof. Arthur Kwok Cheung Li <small> GBS JP</small> (born 1945 in Hong Kong with family roots in Heshan, Guangdong) was a member of the Executive Council of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region and Secretary for Education and Manpower from August 2002 to June 2007, when he was not re-appointed following allegations of interference into academic freedom at the Hong Kong Institute of Education.
- Lee Ming-Kwai
Dick Lee Ming Kwai was the Commissioner of Police of Hong Kong from 2003 to 2007. He attended The Chinese University of Hong Kong and joined the Royal Hong Kong Police Force (now Hong Kong Police Force) on December 1972 as a Probationary Inspector. Lee served as an inspector in both uniform branches and CID in various police divisions in Hong Kong.
- Joseph Yam
Joseph Yam , Chief Executive of Hong Kong Monetary Authority. Being a well-known and key figure in the Hong Kong Financial Community, Mr. Yam also writes every week in HKMA's Viewpoint column. Being authorized by HKMA, we have the pleasure to carry his articles here in Quamnet and share with our readers his insights into various financial and economic subjects.
- John Tsang
Mr John Tsang Chun-wah, JP, is the current Financial Secretary(FS) of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region. His responsibility is to assist the Chief Executive of Hong Kong in overseeing policy formulation and implementation in financial, monetary, economic, trade and employment matters. He exercises control over the Exchange Fund, with the assistance of the Monetary Authority. He is a member of the Executive Council. He is also in charge of the Government Budget.
- Antony Leung
Antony Leung Kam-chung <small>GBS JP</small> (梁錦松, Pinyin: Liáng Jǐnsōng, born 1952 in Hong Kong with family root in Shunde, Guangdong) was the former Financial Secretary of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR). He now serves as the chairman of Blackstone Group's Asian office in Hong Kong. Leung, a former banker and civil service outsider, took the top economic post in one of the world's key financial centres on May 1, 2001.
- Tsang Yam Pui
Tsang Yam Pui, GBS was the Commissioner of Police of Hong Kong from January 2001 to December 2003. Tsang joined the Royal Hong Kong Police Force (now Hong Kong Police Force) in January 1966 as a Probationary Inspector. A remarkable family, his elder brother Donald Tsang was previously Financial Secretary and has been the Chief Executive of Hong Kong since mid-2005 and other siblings have all attained success in their chosen field.
- Hui Ki On
Eddie Hui Ki On, GBS(許淇安 - October 10, 1943), was the last Comissioner of the Royal Hong Kong Police from 1994-1997 and the first Commissioner of Hong Kong Police from 1 July 1997 to 1 January 2001. Hui joined the HKP in 1963 and became Senior Assistant Commissioner in 1989 and Deputy Commissioner (Operations) in 1993. He is now a member of the Board of Directors of the Hong Kong Stock Exchange and Clearings Limited.
- Rafael Hui
Rafael Hui Si Yan, GBS JP (born 1948) is the 3rd Chief Secretary for Administration of Hong Kong and a former career civil servant. He was appointed by the Central People's Government of the People's Republic of China, on the nomination of Chief Executive Donald Tsang, to the current position on June 30, 2005. Mr Hui was appointed as a Justice of the Peace on 1986 and received the honour of Gold Bauhinia Star in 1998.
- Tang King Shing
Tang King Shing, PMSM, PDSM (born 1954) is Commissioner of the Hong Kong Police force. Mr. Tang joined the Royal Hong Kong Police in 1976, as a Probationary Inspector and served in many different departments such as the SDU (Special Duties Unit) and the District Commander of Airport. He was the Deputy Commissioner of Police of Hong Kong Police Operations in 2003, and promoted to Commissioner of Police on 16, January 2007.
- Lau Siu Kai
Prof Lau Siu Kai is a sociologist from Hong Kong. He graduated from The University of Hong Kong, and taught at the Department of Sociology of The Chinese University of Hong Kong after getting a PhD degree from the University of Minnesota. During his tenure at CUHK he was also associate director of the Hong Kong Institute of Asia-Pacific Studies. He is currently on leave from the CUHK (until June 2005) to serve as the head of the government's thinktank, …
- Patrick Ho
Dr Patrick Ho Chi-ping <small>JP</small> is an ophthalmologist, and Hong Kong's former Secretary for Home Affairs. From 1988-2000, he was Professor of Surgery (Ophthalmology) at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. From 2002-2007, he was the Secretary for Home Affairs. His wife is former actress Sibelle Hu.
- Joseph Wong
Joseph Wong Wing Ping <small> GBS JP</small> (王永平, born 1948) has been the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region's Secretary for Commerce, Industry and Technology since 22 January 2006. He was formerly Secretary for the Civil Service. He has been a member of the Executive Council of Hong Kong since 1 August 2000. Wong graduated from the University of Hong Kong in 1969.
- Stephen Ip
Stephen Ip GBS JP (Chinese: 葉澍堃, born 1955) is currently the Secretary for Economic Development and Labour in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region. He was appointed to the position on July 1, 2002. The post of Secretary for Economic Development and Labour is a political appointment. Ip is a career civil servant.
- Anson Chan
Anson Chan (Fang On Sang) <small>GBM GCMG CBE JP </small> (born January 17, 1940) was head of Hong Kong's civil service before and after the territory's handover to the People's Republic of China from British colonial rule. She is the first woman and the first Chinese to hold the second-highest governmental position in Hong Kong. A Chinese would not hold the highest governmental position until Hong Kong's handover to China.
- Li Kwan Ha
Li Kwan Ha was the first Chinese to serve as the Commissioner of the Royal Hong Kong Police from 1989 to 1994. He was the first Chinese Senior Assistant Commissioner of Police in 1984 and Deputy Commissioner of Police prior to 1989.
- Henry Tang
Henry Tang Ying Nian <small>GBS JP</small> (born 1952) is the Chief Secretary for Administration of Hong Kong. He is an avowed free-market capitalist who believes in minimal government economic involvement. The former textile tycoon was promoted from Secretary for Commerce, Industry and Technology to finance chief on August 4, 2003, replacing Antony Leung.
- Yeoh Eng-Kiong
Yeoh Eng Kiong (born 1946) was Secretary for Health and Welfare of Hong Kong between 1999 and 2002, and Secretary for Health, Welfare and Food and member of the Executive Council between 2002 to 2004.
- Frederick Ma
Frederick Ma Si-hang is currently the Secretary of Financial Services and Treasury of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region. He is a member of the Executive Council of Hong Kong. He was appointed to his current position in July, 2002. Ma was previously Group Chief Financial Officer of PCCW Limited and before then a private banker with JP Morgan Private Bank, part of JP Morgan Chase.
- Tsang Tak-Sing
Tsang Tak-sing (1949-) is Secretary for Home Affairs of the HKSAR. Formerly an adviser to the Central Policy Unit, he assumed office on July 1st 2007, replacing Patrick Ho. A leftist, he was jailed during the 1967 riots, when he was a Form Six student at St Paul's College. He was arrested after distributing in classrooms leaflets which condemned "the education system aiming at enslavement". He was jailed for two years for distributing "inflammatory leaflets", …
- Elsie Leung
Elsie Leung Oi Sie<small> GBM JP </small> (born 1939 in Hong Kong with family root in Nanhai, Guangdong) was the Secretary for Justice of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region from 1997 to 2005, and was a member of the Executive Council of Hong Kong. She was succeeded by Wong Yan Lung, <big>SC</big> on October 20, 2005
- Fanny Law
Fanny Law, GBS, JP, is the current Commissioner of the Independent Commission Against Corruption of Hong Kong. She will leave her present seat after July 1 2007. Previously, she was Permanent Secretary for Education and Manpower of Hong Kong. She was Secretary for Education and Manpower until 2002, when the Principal Officials Accountability System was introduced.
- Cheung Man Yee
Cheung Man Yee is the first Chinese person to become "Director of Broadcasting" in Hong Kong. She joined Radio Television Hong Kong as a Programme Officer in 1972. From 1999 to 2002 she was the principal Hong Kong Economic and Trade Representative in Tokyo, Japan.
- Lam Woon-Kwong
Lam Woon-kwong, usually known as WK Lam, was from July 1, 2002 to January 6, 2005, Director of the Chief Executive's Office of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region. He had served as Director of Education, Secretary for the Civil Service and Secretary for Home Affairs before serving as Director of the Chief Executive's Office.
- Charles Philip Haddon-Cave
Sir (Charles) Philip Haddon-Cave (Chinese: 夏鼎基爵士, KBE, CMG (July 6, 1925 - September 28, 1999) was Financial Secretary of Hong Kong from 1971 to 1981. During the period when he was in charge of the economic policy of the Hong Kong government, he adopted "positive non-interventionism" as its chief principle. He was subsequently appointed Chief Secretary, in which post he served from 1981 to 1985.
- Michael Suen
Michael Suen Ming Yeung <small> GBS JP</small> (孫明揚, born 1944) is the Secretary for Education of Hong Kong. Suen joined the Government in 1966 as an Administrative Officer and was promoted to his present rank of Director of Bureau in January 1991. During the early years of his career, he served in the former New Territories Administration, Resettlement Department and Environment Branch.
- Ambrose Lee
Ambrose Lee Siu Kwong <small>IDSM JP</small> is Secretary for Security of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region of the People's Republic of China and a member of the Executive Council. He was appointed to his post in August 2003, replacing Regina Ip.
- Wong Yan Lung
Wong Yan Lung <small>,SC,JP</small> (born 1963) is currently the Secretary for Justice of Hong Kong from October 20,2005. Before his appointment, he was barrister in private practice. He sat as Deputy High Court Judge of the Court of First Instance in July and August in 2003, and was a Council member of the Council of the Hong Kong Bar Association from 1989 to 1990, …
- Jack So
Jack So Chak-kwong born in 1945 is the first and current Chairman of the Hong Kong Film Development Council.
- Michael Rowse
Mr Michael Rowse is currently the Director-General of InvestHK, a department of the Hong Kong Government. Mr Rowse is one of the few foreign-born civil servants in post-handover Hong Kong. Since 1997, according to the Basic Law, government departments can only be headed by officers with no right of abode in a foreign country; this has resulted in the departure of some non-Chinese civil servants from the colonial administration.
- Ronald James Blake
Ronald James Blake, <small>OBE, JP,</small> is a civil engineer, and a former Secretary for Works in the government of colonial Hong Kong. He has been appointed to the post of acting CEO of KCRC on 16 March 2006 to replace the outgoing Samuel Lai.
- Stephen Lam
The Honourable Stephen Sui-lung Lam <small>JP</small> is the Secretary for Constitutional Affairs of Hong Kong. He is currently one of the most unpopular government officials in Hong Kong. He has been criticized for his attitude towards the Ma Ying-jeou incident in early 2005 that banned Ma from visiting Hong Kong.
- Peter Tsao
Peter Kwang Yung Tsao <small>CBE</small> (Chinese: 曹廣榮) (born October 7 1933 in Shanghai, death June 6 2005 in Thailand) was a career civil servant of Hong Kong Tsao was Secretary for Administrative Services and Information (行政司) and Secretary for Home Affairs (政務司) of colonial Hong Kong Government from 1985 to 1991. He was the first ethnic Chinese person to be in a secretary-level position during colonial administration.
- Piers Jacobs
Sir Piers Jacobs KBE, OBE, JP was Financial Secretary of Hong Kong from 1986 to 1991. He also was the Secretary for Economic Services from 1982 to 1986. He died in Hong Kong on September 23, 1999.
- Denise Yue
Denise Yue Chung-yee (俞宗怡)<small> GBS JP</small> is a Hong Kong politician and Secretary for the Civil Service.
- John James Cowperthwaite
Sir John James Cowperthwaite KBE CMG 郭伯偉爵士, April 251915 - January 212006) was Financial Secretary of Hong Kong from 1961 to 1971. His introduction of free market economic policies were widely credited with turning postwar Hong Kong into a thriving global financial centre.
- John Henry Bremridge
Sir John Henry Bremridge, KBE, JP, MA (1926 - 1994) was Financial Secretary of Hong Kong from 1981 to 1986. He was the first Financial Secretary who was not a civil servant. Before serving as Financial Secretary, he was a senior member of staff in the Swire Group.
- Kwong Ki Chi