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Hutchison Whampoa

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Hutchison Whampoa Limited (HWL, 和記黃埔有限公司), , of Hong Kong, is one of the largest companies listed on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange. It is headed by Li Ka Shing, the wealthiest Chinese individual.

History

Hutchison Whampoa was originally two companies founded in 19th century, namely Hongkong and Whampoa Dock established in 1861 by John Couper and Hutchison International in 1880 by John Hutchison. Hutchison Internation, under Douglas Clague, gained controlling interest of Hong Kong Whampoa Dock in 1960s, so as A. S. Watson. In 1977, Hutchison acquired all stake of Hongkong and Whampoa Dock and became Hutchison Whampoa Limited.

Company

The company and its subsidiaries employ over 200,000 employees worldwide.

Industries

It operates in industries related to: Hutchison Whampoa was also Asia's largest satellite television broadcaster until they sold their stake in STAR TV to Rupert Murdoch's News Corp.

Critics

There have been charges made by conservative critics of China in the United States that Hutchison Whampoa provides a means by which the People's Liberation Army intends to gain control over the Panama Canal. However, many people see these charges are baseless. Some critics (including Howard Phillips, Chairman of the US Conservative Caucus, and Larry Klayman, the founder of Judicial Watch) contend that contracts putting large parts of the Panama Canal under Hutchison Whampoa control were handled in a corrupt manner. They also have suggested that in letting Hutchison Whampoa control the Panama Canal they may be putting it under control of the Chinese government, since Hutchison Whampoa has is alleged to have strong links to the Communist Party of China.

Frank Gaffney, of the Center for Security Policy, has written that Whampoa "is currently hard at work acquiring a presence for China at other strategic 'choke points' around the world, including notably the Caribbean's Bahamas, the Mediterranean's Malta, and the Persian Gulf's Straits of Hormuz. At a moment inconvenient to the United States, such access could translate into physical or other obstacles to our use of such waterways."[link]

Hutchison Whampoa have also been criticized for heavy-handedness towards British art charity The Couper Collection, by The Daily Mirror, The Telegraph (2002), and The Sunday Times (2004). See [article on the Sunday Times website]. The dispute also involves British architect Norman Foster and in late 2005, comedienne Ruby Wax (see [UK Observer article]).

Richard Perle

In March 2003, after an exposé in The New Yorker by Seymour Hersh, the neoconservative Richard Perle resigned from US Defense Policy Board after lobbying on behalf of Global Crossing, a bankrupt telecommunications company. Perle had attempted to persuade Hutchison Whampoa to buy the company. The FBI said at the time that selling Global Crossing to Hutchison Whampoa would give Whampoa control of the world's largest fiber optic network, and allow it to oversee existing contracts for secure Pentagon communications. Hutchison Whampoa is alleged to have many dealings with front companies for the People's Liberation Army in China. Democratic legislator, Rep. John Conyers Jr. of Michigan requested that Pentagon to investigate Perle's business dealings. Perle was to receive a total payment of $725,000 for his advisory work, $650,000 of which would be contingent on the sale going through. Ironically, many of Perle's neoconservative allies were critical of the Clinton administration for accepting campaign donations that allegedly came from China, as well as attacking the Clinton administration for not blocking the 1999 sale of parts of the Panama Canal to Hutchison Whampoa, saying it would give China too much control. Retired Rear Admiral Thomas Brooks, who served on the Defense Policy Board during the Clinton administration, said Perle's actions were "certainly questionable. It sounds like he's squeezing every nickel out of the Defense Policy Board", whilst Larry Noble, director of the Center for Responsible Politics, said "This is a conflict of interest. He's using his position on the board to win business."

See also

External link and references

Data


Cheung Kong Holdings | Hutchison Whampoa | Hongkong Electric | Cheung Kong Life Sciences | TOM Group

 


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