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No judge in sight to head Hong Kong's lead-in-water inquiry yet

Tough to get suitable candidates, Carrie Lam says two weeks after the CE vowed probe

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Sha Tin District Council member Yau Man-chun kneel in front of Carrie Lam's car urging the government to test water lead level for Shui Chuen O Estate. Photo: David Wong

Everything is in place for a commission of inquiry into the city's water contamination scare - except for the chairman and the only other member of the body - the chief secretary says.

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No one had yet been named, more than two weeks after Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying said he would appoint an independent high-level body, led by a judge, to study why drinking water in some public residential estates contained excessive lead.

Leung's No2, Carrie Lam Cheng Yuet-ngor, said yesterday that it was proving tough to find suitable people to conduct the investigation, the third announced into the tainted-water scare.

She also clarified for the first time that just two people - the judge, plus one other - would make up the commission.

"The secretary, secretariat staff, office and hearing venue of the inquiry commission are all ready," Lam said.

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Once the pair were found, she would put their names to the Executive Council for a formal appointment. "The most important task at the moment is to find a chairman," Lam said, adding that Chief Justice Geoffrey Ma Tao-li was looking for a judge to play that role while she sought the second member.

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