Who is Catherine Wu, adviser to CDL’s Kwek Leng Beng? 

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Mr Kwek Leng Beng reportedly met his long-time adviser, Dr Catherine Wu, at a dinner party in Taiwan in 1992.

Mr Kwek Leng Beng reportedly met his long-time adviser, Dr Catherine Wu, at a dinner party in Taiwan in 1992.

PHOTOS: ST FILE, SPH FILE

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SINGAPORE – Mr Kwek Leng Beng’s long-time adviser Catherine Wu came under the spotlight when his son Sherman Kwek, group chief executive of City Developments Limited (CDL), said on Feb 27 that

she was the underlying reason

behind the family’s public rift.

The older Mr Kwek and Dr Wu first met in Taiwan in 1992 at a dinner party, according to Chinese daily Lianhe Zaobao. Here are some details about Dr Wu

1. Dr Wu has been Mr Kwek Leng Beng’s adviser for the past three decades

She served as a director at Millennium & Copthorne Hotels (M&C), a wholly owned and principal subsidiary of CDL Group, the hotel arm of Mr Kwek Leng Beng’s business empire. Her service was terminated in January 2024, but she returned to M&C’s board as an adviser seven months later.

Dr Wu served as a director at Millennium & Copthorne Hotels until January 2024.

PHOTO: SPH MEDIA

Dr Wu, who is in her 60s, also acted as personal assistant to Mr Kwek – though she was not an employee – and was paid directly by him, according to an employment tribunal document filed in London in 2018.

When she moved to Singapore from Taiwan in 1992, she had the opportunity to be placed under Mr Kwek’s tutelage. In a 2024 interview with Zaobao, she said that in her role, she learnt the ropes of hotel management, which included accompanying Mr Kwek to meetings and overseeing hotel decoration and inspection processes. 

She is known to be single and has five older brothers. Mr Kwek is married to Madam Cecilia Kok, and they have two sons, Mr Sherman Kwek and Mr Kingston Kwek.

2. She is musically trained 

When Dr Wu was 15, her parents reportedly sent her to the San Francisco Conservatory of Music to pursue her music studies. She won a scholarship and furthered her studies at The Juilliard School in New York. In the Zaobao interview, she spoke about the pressure she faced and the stressful nature of her academic journey. 

“Entering The Juilliard School is like studying law at Harvard University. All my classmates were very talented and competition was fierce,” she said in the interview. 

After completing her studies in the US, she returned to Taiwan – where she is originally from – to release her music albums.

Dr Wu studied music in the US and went on to release her own albums in Taiwan.

PHOTO: SPH MEDIA

3. She entered the early childhood industry 

When she moved to Singapore, she joined the early childhood industry and ran her own kindergarten business.

Marrying her passion for music and education, she wrote and directed a musical each year for the children to perform at their graduation ceremony, she told Zaobao.

She sold the business after a decade in the industry and dedicated more of her time to various aspects of hotel management. 

4. She was involved in a tribunal related to a hotel employee in London

She was reportedly close to hotel employee Tan Chee Hwee, who was senior vice-president of global procurement at the Gloucester Millennium Hotel in Kensington, according to British tabloid The Daily Mail. 

When Mr Tan lost his job in 2017, he made a string of claims and complaints against Millennium & Copthorne Hotels, saying he felt “harassed and offended” when others referred to him as a “diva”.

While he claimed he was not friends with Dr Wu, the tribunal heard they were “close confidants” and had attended a show by comedian Graham Norton together.

5. She was interested in cyber security

In 2024, she was interviewed by radio station Money FM 89.3 about cyber-security threats during her stint as secretary-general of GeekCon International, a conference held by security research institute Darknavy.

“I think most importantly, we should recognise the threats and that the vulnerabilities can never be totally eliminated. We know our bodies and when we get sick... Through self checks, you know when something becomes less protected... It is better to take a proactive approach,” she said. 

Dr Wu and CDL’s Mr Kwek at GeekCon in Singapore in May 2024.

PHOTO: GEEKCON

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