
The move by the Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod (LCMS) was revealed in a letter to parents on Sunday from Hong Kong International School (HKIS) management, which called the search part of church actions “designed to create distraction and uncertainty around the school”.
LCMS, which co-founded the school in 1966, confirmed with the South China Morning Post that it was now conducting its own search for the next head, saying “leadership uncertainty is disruptive for students and families”.
Advertisement
The recruitment efforts came after the church sued HKIS last September, alleging a breach of an operational agreement and accusing the school of serving only the “rich and privileged few” and amassing excessive financial reserves. The school is operated by Hong Kong International School Association Limited (HKISAL).
“To protect student welfare and ensure a smooth transition, we gave nearly a year’s notice and scheduled the head of school change between school years,” LCMS said.
Advertisement
“Before any litigation, we asked HKISAL to lead the search, but with no process under way and the risks to leadership continuity growing, we acted to begin the search ourselves.

Don't Miss:
-
Is China’s commercial rocket now cheaper than Elon Musk’s SpaceX Falcon 9?
-
BBC defends action in new sex abuse scandal
-
Trump claims Iran president wants ceasefire, no response from Tehran
-
What does the China-Pakistan plan for the Iran crisis mean for a post-war order?
-
Philippines seeks Iran talks for safe passage of vessels through Hormuz amid energy crisis

The story that rocked the world: Ten years of the Panama Papers, part 1
France to try alleged Magnitsky Affair mastermind Dimitry Klyuev in absentia
Canada revokes dozens of crypto firms’ registrations