Beshom

After 46 outstanding years as Hai-O Enterprise Bhd, we look forward to the future as we preserve the best of our legacy.
We are excited to invite you into our new home.

海鸥集团历经时光淬砺,46年来发展一枝独秀。
展望未来,集团整装待发,以焕然一新的英文名字营造美满的新“”。
此番华丽转变,公司优良传统不变,文化企业精神亦如初衷。

Beshom

Beshom Holdings Bhd is the new “HOME” of Hai-O’s group of companies, a Public Listed Company on the Main Market of Bursa Malaysia Securities Berhad.
Beshom has assumed the listing status of Hai-O Enterprise Bhd on
29 November 2021.

Welcome to BESHOM.

最佳生活    始于家元
海鸥控股有限公司(Beshom Holdings Bhd),2021年11月29日,
正式延续海鸥企业有限公司在大马股票交易所主板的上市地位。

欢迎光临我们的新“”——BESHOM。

News

Two Malaysians in Forbes Asia's annual Heroes of Philanthropy list

Two Malaysians in Forbes Asia's annual Heroes of Philanthropy list
Source:
NST
Forbes Asia today announced its annual Heroes of Philanthropy list, highlighting some of the region’s noteworthy givers. This year’s list includes two Malaysians — Top Glove Corp Bhd executive chairman and founder Tan Sri Lim Wee Chai (left), and Hai-O Enterprise Bhd executive chairman Tan Kai Hee.

KUALA LUMPUR: Forbes Asia today announced its annual Heroes of Philanthropy list, highlighting some of the region’s noteworthy givers.

It honours 40 philanthropists from 14 countries across Asia Pacific.

 

This year’s list includes two Malaysians — Top Glove Corp Bhd executive chairman and founder Tan Sri Lim Wee Chai, and Hai-O Enterprise Bhd executive chairman Tan Kai Hee.

Lim, 59, and his wife Tong Siew Bee, started the Top Glove Foundation in 2009 with an initial US$300,000.

“Since then, the foundation has donated roughly US$5 million to various causes, with a focus on education. Recent beneficiaries include several Chinese-medium schools in Malaysia as well as Universiti Tunku Abdul Rahman, which received US$70,000 in 2015 to create a chair for the Top Glove Professor of Chemistry,” the Forbes Asia article said.

Tan, meanwhile, at his 80th-birthday dinner party in January, announced he was putting US$22 million of his shares in Hai-O — the Chinese traditional-medicine company he started in 1975 — into a trust, with stock gains and dividends to be donated to cultural, social, environmental and educational charities.

He also pledged more than US$500,000 to 38 entities, including the Federation of Chinese Associations Malaysia and the Centre for Malaysian Chinese Studies.

“Over the previous nine years he had donated some US$5 million; beneficiaries included victims of the 2008 Sichuan earthquake, dozens of Chinese-medium schools around Malaysia, and Yayasan Usman Awang, a foundation dedicated to the memory of the late National Laureate that aims to promote unity in multiracial Malaysia,” the article added.

The full list can be found in the July issue of Forbes Asia, which features former Chinese basketball superstar Yao Ming on the cover.

Through his Yao Foundation, which has an annual budget of around US$2.5 million, Yao equips and trains students in sports at schools in remote areas of China with no physical education programmes.