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Hong Kong’s ice cool Iron Lady with a will of steel

Carrie Lam is renowned for sticking to her principles and never backing down from a fight, but critics fear her combative approach, should she be elected chief executive, will not help a city crying out for reconciliation

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Carrie Lam tendered her resignation as chief secretary on Thursday, setting up a potential chief executive election battle with former financial secretary John Tsang. Photo: Dickson Lee
Carrie Lam was completing her first month as head of a newly minted Development Bureau when she entered the lion’s den.
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For days during the summer of 2007, conservation activists had been protesting against the demolition of Queen’s Pier in Central to make way for a reclamation project, and Lam agreed to engage them in a dialogue – on their turf, the site of the demonstration.

Watch: Carrie Lam declares her bid to lead Hong Kong

By then several of the protesters had gone on hunger strike. Braving their jeers, the sight of the weary strikers and petitions written in blood, she took them on in a passionate exchange of views.

Carrie Lam meets Queen's Pier activists in July 2007. Photo: Martin Chan
Carrie Lam meets Queen's Pier activists in July 2007. Photo: Martin Chan

But Lam was immovable. The decision to demolish the pier was the right one, she insisted.

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“If this public forum can only be held with the government or myself promising that Queen’s Pier will not be relocated or demolished, I am sorry, I cannot make such a pledge,” Lam said.

“We cannot think that a new minister taking office means she can change historical facts.”

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