Swire & Sons director appointed as Cathay Pacific chairman

Swire & Sons director appointed as Cathay Pacific chairman
A jet plane of Cathay Pacific Airways is being towed at the Hong Kong International Airport. (PHOTO / IC)
A jet plane of Cathay Pacific Airways is being towed at the Hong Kong International Airport. (PHOTO / IC)
Published 5 September 2019
China Daily/ANN

China Daily/ANN - Cathay Pacific Airways appointed Patrick Healy chairman of the board and executive director to succeed John Robert Slosar, who resigned on Wednesday.

 

Slosar, 63, said in the statement that his resignation is due to his retirement. He is the third Cathay Pacific executive to resign since mass protests against the city’s proposed extradition-law amendment bill began.

Healy, 53, now serves as a director of John Swire & Sons (HK) Ltd and Swire Properties Ltd and executive director of the Beverages Division of Swire Pacific Ltd. His appointment and election will take effect at the board meeting on Nov 6.

The months-long protests and violent clashes have rattled Cathay Pacific as CEO Rupert Hogg and chief customer and commercial officer Paul Loo kar-pui resigned from the airline on Aug 16, a week after receiving a major aviation safety-risk warning from the Civil Aviation Administration of China.

Augustus Tang Kin-wing is the new chief executive officer, and Ronald Lam Siu-por, who headed Cathay Pacific’s low-cost arm, Hong Kong Express, became the chief customer and commercial officer.

In addition, two Cathay Pacific pilots have been terminated after one was charged with rioting and another was accused of misusing company information related to protests in August. Two of the airline’s ground employees also were sacked after they leaked passenger information about the Hong Kong Police Force’s soccer team.

In the first half of 2019, Cathay Pacific recorded total revenue of HK$53.55 million ($6.83 million), a 0.9 percent increase due to a growth in the number of passengers. The figure represented growth of 4.4 percent, which brought the company’s passenger services revenue to HK$37.45 billion, up 5.6 percent.

The carrier said the protests and escalating US-China trade tensions loomed over the outlook of the group.

On Wednesday, Cathay Pacific’s share price rose 7.21 percent to close at HK$10.7.