Mr Tung is facing unprecedented popular pressure
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The pressure on Hong Kong's government increased on Thursday as unemployment levels rose to unheard-of highs.
The proportion of people out of work in the former British colony reached 8.6% for the three months to June, a third of a percentage point up on the previous record set only a month earlier.
The news, in line with economists' dismal forecasts, may make life even more difficult for beleaguered chief executive Tung Chee-hwa, already struggling against unprecedented popular outrage.
Demonstrations by hundreds of thousands of people - the biggest in China since the Tiananmen Square pro-democracy marches of 1989 - have forced Mr Tung to ditch both a controversial security law and his security chief Regina Ip.
And a scandal over luxury car taxes has claimed the scalp of the finance minister, Antony Leung.
Mr Leung's departure had a modest effect on Hong Kong stock prices, with the main Hang Seng index ending the day down 1.1%.
Sars damage
The jobless figures are a touchstone for popular dissatisfaction with the administration of Mr Tung.
Hand-picked by Beijing to run the "Special Administrative Region" under a banner of "one country, two systems" when Hong Kong was handed back to China in 1997, Mr Tung has always been seen as a placeman.
But his apparent willingness to dance to Beijing's tune has only really become a concern for many Hong Kong residents since the Sars respiratory epidemic hit the territory.
Beijing's long-sustained denial that the mainland had a problem went unchallenged by Mr Tung, despite the damage the epidemic did to the territory's economy.