Harbour Fest
The Hong Kong Harbour Fest (Chinese: 維港巨星匯), held from 17 October to 11 November 2003, was part of a HK$10 million program to revive the economy of Hong Kong SAR after the SARS. It was a government underwritten event organised by InvestHK, under the auspices of the Economic Relaunch Working Group, in collaboration with the American Chamber of Commerce.[1] The event was billed as "a dazzling series of live shows catering to all tastes and ages, encompassing rock n' roll, family entertainment, blues and jazz, classical, theatrical performances and a Vegas Night,"[2] Its organisation, which resulted in massive cost overruns, was heavily criticised.
History
Background
In its efforts to rebuild Hong Kong's image after the SARS outbreak, the government asked Legco for and obtained approval for a HK$1 billion package to finance certain initiatives. However, the government was criticised for not revealing how the money would be spent.[3]
The event was agreed upon by the Economic Relaunch Working Group ("ERWG"), which was led by the then financial secretary Antony Leung. Jim Thompson of the American Chamber of Commerce (AmCham) proposed a three-week waterfront music extravaganza, and concerts by popular local and international acts.[4]
Project and rationale
Harbour Fest would be organised by AmCham, who would retain future rights to the event name; the government underwrote the project. The organisers initially estimated the festival would cost HK$130 million to stage. They said it will raise HK$50 million assuming half of the 200,000 tickets were sold. Any shortfall would be met by taxpayers.[5] The ERWG agreed to a HK$80 million "sponsorship fee and money to underwrite losses of the festival".[4]
It was billed as "a dazzling series of live shows catering to all tastes and ages, encompassing rock n' roll, family entertainment, blues and jazz, classical, theatrical performances and a Vegas Night", to be staged outdoors at Admiralty's Tamar site over four weekends, from 17 October to 9 November 2003. A large concert stage would be erected, with reserved seating for up to 13,000 people per show. In excess of 200,000 tickets would be made available for the entire event.[2]
The declared objective was to attract people from North America, Europe and other countries in the region back to Hong Kong, with the Walt Disney Company screening a one-hour highlights package of the concerts in the United States over Christmas 2003.[5]
Performance roster
Roster | |
Date (in 2003) | Performers |
17 October | Prince, Karen Mok |
18 October | |
18 October | Craig David |
19 October | |
20 October | José Carreras, Charlotte Church, Hong Kong Philharmonic Orchestra |
24 October | t.A.T.u., Twins |
25 October | Westlife, Energy, Evonne Hsu |
26 October | Air Supply, Eason Chan, Ronald Cheng |
30 October | Gipsy Kings, Danny Diaz, Lee Hyori |
31 October | Gigi Leung, Yumiko Cheng, Boy'z, Candy Lo, Shine, Seven |
1 November | Santana, Andy Hui |
2 November | Gary Valenciano |
6 November | Neil Young, Michelle Branch |
7 November | Rolling Stones |
9 November | Rolling Stones |
Although Prince attracted 11,000 people, attendance at other shows was poor.[4] On 7 November and 9 November 2003, the Rolling Stones played their first ever concerts in Hong Kong, as part of Harbour Fest.
Controversies
This cost was criticised by legislators and critics as too expensive. The underwriting cost soon went up to HK$100 million.[4] The Democratic Party surveyed 900 members of the public, and established that more than 50% of the polled believe the government was wasting public money on the Harbour Fest,[6] and Ma Lik said the government appeared to act as if it had received carte blanche.[3]
On 21 October, AmCham announced that previously billed Cantopop artists Andy Hui, Joey Yung and Nicholas Tse would no longer appear due to artists prior commitments. The artists' agent, Emperor Entertainment Group, however, alleges that AmCham had dropped them from the billings.[7]
The organisers then decided to give away tickets for the concert which was to have featured Atomic Kitten, which dropped out due to illness of singer Natasha Hamilton. The distribution of free tickets to see the remaining acts Twins and t.A.T.u. was marred by scuffles at outlets which saw tickets snapped up within 30 minutes. Many hundreds who had queued up for many hours were furious.[8]
The appearance of Rolling Stones was shrouded in confusion until 14 October, when their two nights at the festival were finally confirmed. They were reportedly paid US$5 million for the concerts.[9]
Aftermath
Independent inquiry
An Independent Panel of Inquiry headed by Moses Cheng was commissioned to review and investigate the handling of the Harbour Fest, and a report of the Harbour Fest was issued in May 2004.[10]
Public Accounts Committee report
In June 2004, a Legislative Council Public Accounts Committee report criticised InvestHK for improper stewardship of taxpayers' money over the organisation of Harbour Fest music festival, a post-SARS event held in an attempt to restore business confidence in Hong Kong. Rowse was charged with five offences:
- failure to introduce provisions to give the Government power of approval over program and budget changes
- failure to provide refund in a sponsorship agreement with the American Chamber of Commerce for events not held, and for the Chamber to regularly report on progress, and to consult with Government on ticketing strategy
- failure to review ticket pricing strategy and free ticket distribution
- failure to establish a mechanism for InvestHK to scrutinise budget and expenditure of the event
Rowse was held responsible only for the fifth charge of failing to ensure that InvestHK critically examine the HarbourFest budget, and fully and adequately advise the working group on the finances. Consequently, he was fined one month's salary when the government made a ruling in October 2005.[11]
He appealed, but on 26 January 2007, Chief Secretary Rafael Hui confirmed the October 2005 ruling, and the consequential fine. A member of Legco criticised the fact that there have been more reports of the disciplinary hearings in the media than to Legco.[12] Legislator Cheung Man Kwong criticised the government for making Rowse a scapegoat for ministerial failure: "...ministers, including the Finance chief, only apologised without any punishment". Another one questioned the political motivation : "How come the timing of the decision against the appeal is so coincidental [with the election for the Chief Executive]?".[13]
Appeal
During an Economic Relaunch Working Group meeting on 31 October 2003 and during an independent inquiry in May 2004, then financial secretary Henry Tang is alleged to have said Michael Rowse, Director General of InvestHK, had not acted improperly and that there had been no irregularity in the implementation of the event.[14] Tang had also said that all parties had underestimated the complexity of the event and may have been too ambitious in organising it in such a short timespan. He later withdrew the remark: just before a government inquiry opened on November 2004, Tang requested the ERWG minutes be deleted.[14] Rowse's counsel argued for the appeal saying his client's case was prejudiced as he had been denied legal representation.
Long-standing business columnist Jake van der Kamp commented that Rowse had been let down by Donald Tsang, whose responsibility as Chief Secretary it ultimately was to oversee the Harbour Fest expenditure.[15]
Court ruling
In July 2008, Rowse has won his judicial review against the government's decision to fine him HK$156,000 for his role in organising Harbour Fest.[16] The judge found there to have been a breach of the rule of fairness: as the threshold of the burden of proof was not sufficiently high, the committee's findings should not have been relied on by the Secretary for the civil service. He further ruled that Donald Tsang had acted outside his powers in deciding to delegate his decision under the administration order to the Chief Secretary.[17]
See also
Molson Canadian Rocks for Toronto, a similar event held in Toronto, Canada to revive the economy after SARS.
References
- ↑ "Concerts meant to revive economy". The Standard (Hong Kong). 26 February 2008. Retrieved 26 February 2008.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Press release, "HK gets ready to rock!", InvestHK, 3 September 2003
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 Ma Lik (20 September 2003). "Think outside the box-office". The Standard. Retrieved 27 February 2008.
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 Marcal Joanilho (1 November 2003). "Three-week road to hell for unlucky Jim". The Standard. Retrieved 27 February 2008.
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 Paris Lord (4 September 2003). "It's terrific Tamar". The Standard. Retrieved 27 February 2008.
- ↑ Teddy Ng (16 September 2003). "Harbour Fest waste of money: survey". The Standard (Hong Kong). Retrieved 27 February 2008.
- ↑ Paris Lord (22 October 2003). "Harbour Fest hit by Cantopop row". The Standard. Retrieved 27 February 2008.
- ↑ "Fury at free tickets farce". The Standard. 24 October 2003. Retrieved 27 February 2008.
- ↑ Paris Lord (15 October 2003). "Stones back on bill after contract claim". The Standard. Retrieved 27 February 2008.
- ↑ Report of the Independent Panel of Inquiry on the Harbour Fest, May 2004
- ↑ Jimmy Cheung; Dennis Eng (9 February 2007). "Rowse punished for Harbour Fest failures". South China Morning Post.
- ↑ Martin Wong; Klaudia Lee (28 January 2007). "Rowse to fight on over Fest penalty". South China Morning Post. p. 3.
- ↑ Jimmy Cheung (28 January 2007). "Lawmakers challenge Rowse punishment". South China Morning Post (Hong Kong). p. 1.
- ↑ 14.0 14.1 Nishika Patel, Rowse seeks to have music fest verdict quashed, The Standard, 26 February 2008
- ↑ Jake van der Kamp (30 January 2007). "Shabby treatment of Rowse kills any hope of civil service initiative". South China Morning Post.
- ↑ Regina Leung (4 July 2008). "Mike Rowse wins judicial review". South China Morning Post.
- ↑ Christine Loh (10 July 2008). "A matter of principle". South China Morning Post. pp. A15.