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Hong Kong’s first Chinese police commissioner Li Kwan-ha dies at age 79

Li joined Royal Hong Kong Police in 1957, retiring in 1994

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A file picture of Li Kwan-ha (right), then commissioner of police, inspecting a parade. Photo: SCMP

Former police commissioner Li Kwan-ha, who in 1989 became the first Chinese person to head the force, died in Queen Mary Hospital on Monday night. He was 79.

Li’s daughter called for an ambulance at about 8.15pm after he collapsed in the bathroom at his home in Baguio Villa on Victoria Road. He was taken to the hospital nearby but was declared dead at 8.51pm.

Li is survived by two daughters. His wife died in November 2007.

Li joined the Royal Hong Kong Police in 1957. He was promoted to deputy police commissioner in 1985, the first local Chinese officer in that role.

He then succeeded Raymon Anning in December 1989 and become the first Chinese police commissioner in the city under British rule

After he retired in 1994, Li joined tycoon Li Ka-Shing’s Hutchison Whampoa and Cheung Kong as a consultant.

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