Whistle-blowing scheme not a threat to harmony: Hong Kong housing chief
Winnie Ho also says informants will need to be interviewed by authorities to assess the accuracy of the information
Rewarding whistle-blowers who report public-flat abuse will not undermine social harmony, Hong Kong’s housing minister has said as she defended the new measure aimed at better allocating resources.
Secretary for Housing Winnie Ho Wing-yin also urged residents to prioritise personal safety when gathering information under the HK$3,000 (US$386) reward scheme, set to take effect on January 15.
“We will only reward the person who provides ‘critical information’ that is helpful to our investigation. We may receive multiple tip-offs for one case, but we will reward the most helpful one,” Ho told a radio programme on Thursday.
“If there is more than one informant and their information is equally critical, they will split the HK$3,000.”
About 800,000 households live in public rental flats, an affordable and much sought-after housing option for low-income groups in a city with land shortages and subdivided homes.
With limited resources, the government has been building transitional housing as a temporary solution while residents wait for public flats.