Pubdate: Wed, 22 Dec 1999 Source: South China Morning Post (Hong Kong) Copyright: 1999 South China Morning Post Publishers Limited. Contact: http://www.scmp.com/ Address: South China Morning Post, G.P.O. Box 47, Hong Kong HONG KONG: DYING MAN'S FAMILY FIGHTS EVICTION A housewife is trying to prevent her family of six being evicted after her dying husband was convicted of possessing opium, which he used to ease the pain of cancer. Thai Muoi yesterday filed a judicial review application seeking to quash the Housing Authority decision made in April which she described as unlawful. She claimed it was wrong for the authority to terminate the tenancy agreement because she did not know her husband, Ho Lam, kept opium in their Choi Hung flat. The mother of four said in the application that even if she had known, she had no power to evict her husband and she had no duty to report the matter, bearing in mind he was suffering from a "rather advanced stage" of stomach cancer. In the application filed at the High Court, the 52-year-old housewife said her family had leased the flat in Kai Ning House, Kai Yip Estate, since March 1982. The couple are unemployed and their eldest daughter, who works as a nurse earning about $20,000 a month, supports the family. Three other children are at school. The application said Mr Ho, 60, was arrested at the Lowu checkpoint on July 22, 1997, after two packets of raw opium were found in his travelling bag. A search was conducted at his flat, where two other packets of raw opium were found in a jacket. Mr Ho was convicted of two charges of possession of dangerous drugs in November 1997 and sent to a treatment centre. A notice to terminate their lease was issued by the authority on April 30 this year on the grounds that Mr Ho had violated the agreement by using the premises for "illegal purpose". An appeal to overturn the decision was launched by the family but was dismissed by the Appeal Tribunal in August. The authority told the tribunal the family's eviction reflected its determination to support the fight against drug trafficking. The application said it was unreasonable to order the whole family to be evicted for a crime they were not responsible for. "It is also unreasonable to punish Mr Ho twice by terminating the applicant's agreement," it said. Mrs Ho argued both the authority and the tribunal had failed to consider the family's plight. Outside court, Mrs Ho said the family was worried about the future as well as her husband's health: "We do not know what to do now. Maybe eventually we will be forced to sleep on the street because we could not afford to pay rent for other flats." - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D