Berliner Boersenzeitung - A promise kept or betrayal? Hong Kong 25 years on from handover

EUR -
AED 4.211393
AFN 72.244796
ALL 95.982096
AMD 432.319357
ANG 2.052753
AOA 1051.557417
ARS 1603.424201
AUD 1.641243
AWG 2.064125
AZN 1.954004
BAM 1.955435
BBD 2.309469
BDT 140.703754
BGN 1.960126
BHD 0.435819
BIF 3404.065016
BMD 1.146736
BND 1.467326
BOB 7.923522
BRL 6.112796
BSD 1.146686
BTN 105.842257
BWP 15.625085
BYN 3.392867
BYR 22476.027392
BZD 2.30607
CAD 1.583471
CDF 2588.183773
CHF 0.912745
CLF 0.026638
CLP 1051.798264
CNY 7.908585
CNH 7.921286
COP 4222.512346
CRC 539.499363
CUC 1.146736
CUP 30.388506
CVE 110.244435
CZK 24.575006
DJF 204.191911
DKK 7.505507
DOP 70.446859
DZD 153.116438
EGP 59.873831
ERN 17.201041
ETB 178.984913
FJD 2.555735
FKP 0.866182
GBP 0.866311
GEL 3.131037
GGP 0.866182
GHS 12.452677
GIP 0.866182
GMD 84.289519
GNF 10052.124908
GTQ 8.79336
GYD 239.895251
HKD 8.97946
HNL 30.352338
HRK 7.568004
HTG 150.351954
HUF 394.179508
IDR 19448.701448
ILS 3.605729
IMP 0.866182
INR 106.170389
IQD 1502.119799
IRR 1515669.760861
ISK 144.837141
JEP 0.866182
JMD 179.916439
JOD 0.813081
JPY 183.185402
KES 148.312334
KGS 100.281732
KHR 4598.142277
KMF 494.243657
KPW 1032.019272
KRW 1723.258101
KWD 0.352542
KYD 0.955522
KZT 561.355287
LAK 24570.416711
LBP 102681.246162
LKR 356.863432
LRD 209.830859
LSL 19.258608
LTL 3.386014
LVL 0.69365
LYD 7.316635
MAD 10.799685
MDL 20.003269
MGA 4761.111877
MKD 61.628504
MMK 2408.293814
MNT 4109.908675
MOP 9.243576
MRU 45.877442
MUR 53.33513
MVR 17.717506
MWK 1988.229122
MXN 20.584147
MYR 4.516425
MZN 73.288336
NAD 19.258608
NGN 1588.807126
NIO 42.19213
NOK 11.176343
NPR 169.34741
NZD 1.985003
OMR 0.440925
PAB 1.146586
PEN 3.954262
PGK 5.014065
PHP 68.334433
PKR 320.169477
PLN 4.298483
PYG 7397.620071
QAR 4.168222
RON 5.117429
RSD 117.34811
RUB 91.632507
RWF 1673.28787
SAR 4.303626
SBD 9.233195
SCR 17.507734
SDG 689.18878
SEK 10.871865
SGD 1.469547
SHP 0.860349
SLE 28.152796
SLL 24046.494883
SOS 654.177972
SRD 43.05769
STD 23735.121842
STN 24.495431
SVC 10.033128
SYP 126.777699
SZL 19.252409
THB 37.071728
TJS 10.99055
TMT 4.013576
TND 3.391067
TOP 2.761065
TRY 50.645643
TTD 7.776549
TWD 36.918714
TZS 2986.942825
UAH 50.565468
UGX 4311.195803
USD 1.146736
UYU 46.061408
UZS 13845.417319
VES 507.665371
VND 30152.278788
VUV 137.132233
WST 3.13652
XAF 655.834663
XAG 0.014239
XAU 0.000228
XCD 3.099112
XCG 2.066515
XDR 0.815648
XOF 655.834663
XPF 119.331742
YER 273.554311
ZAR 19.360243
ZMK 10322.005017
ZMW 22.318837
ZWL 369.248554
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • CMSD

    -0.1100

    22.99

    -0.48%

  • VOD

    0.1000

    14.41

    +0.69%

  • CMSC

    -0.1500

    22.99

    -0.65%

  • RYCEF

    -1.1300

    16.12

    -7.01%

  • GSK

    -0.8900

    53.39

    -1.67%

  • BTI

    0.0400

    59.93

    +0.07%

  • BCE

    -0.1100

    25.57

    -0.43%

  • RELX

    -0.0400

    34.14

    -0.12%

  • NGG

    0.0900

    90.9

    +0.1%

  • AZN

    -2.6000

    189.9

    -1.37%

  • JRI

    -0.2300

    12.59

    -1.83%

  • RIO

    -2.8700

    87.83

    -3.27%

  • BCC

    0.3800

    70

    +0.54%

  • BP

    0.5100

    42.67

    +1.2%

A promise kept or betrayal? Hong Kong 25 years on from handover
A promise kept or betrayal? Hong Kong 25 years on from handover / Photo: TORSTEN BLACKWOOD - AFP/File

A promise kept or betrayal? Hong Kong 25 years on from handover

As midnight struck on June 30, 1997 and Hong Kong transitioned from British to Chinese rule, pro-democracy lawmaker Lee Wing-tat stood with colleagues on the balcony of the city's legislature, holding a defiant protest.

Text size:

Hong Kong will mark the 25th anniversary of the handover on Friday and the halfway point of One Country, Two Systems -- the governance model agreed by Britain and China under which the city would keep some autonomy and freedoms.

That model was set to last 50 years. But even in its first hours, battle lines that would define Hong Kong's politics for the next two decades were drawn.

Furious at outgoing British governor Chris Patten's last-gasp attempts at democratisation, China had announced that any legislator who had openly supported the measures would be thrown out.

So the minute the handover became effective, Lee and many of his colleagues became seatless, but remained within the legislature to protest their expulsion.

Other opposition figures went to the handover ceremony to show goodwill, but returned to join the rally later.

"This is a moment when all Chinese people should feel proud," Martin Lee, founder of Hong Kong's Democratic Party, said in a speech at the time. "We hope Hong Kong and China can progress together."

Lee Wing-tat had more mixed feelings.

"We were no longer that optimistic and I no longer believed we would have full-fledged democracy," he told AFP.

Twenty-five years later, there are no opposition lawmakers left in Hong Kong's legislature at all.

Many have been arrested under a national security law Beijing imposed in 2020 or disqualified from standing for office under new "patriots only" electoral rules.

Others have fled -- including Lee Wing-tat, who now lives in Britain.

- Escalating mistrust -

Like many, Lee had been hopeful in 1984, when the Sino-British Joint Declaration laid the path to ending more than 150 years of British colonial rule.

One Country, Two Systems promised a high degree of autonomy, independent judicial power, and that the city's leader would be appointed by Beijing on the basis of local elections or consultations.

"Deng (Xiaoping, China's then leader) back then said a lot about things like 'Hong Kong people administering Hong Kong', which was rather compelling," Lee said.

But China's deadly 1989 Tiananmen crackdown, which saw Beijing send in tanks to crush a democracy movement, shattered his faith in the ruling Communist Party (CCP).

In the years after the handover, mistrust between Beijing and Hong Kongers like Lee only escalated.

The pro-democracy camp saw Beijing as ruthless authoritarians set on denying Hong Kongers their promised rights. And the CCP increasingly saw their demands as a challenge to China's sovereignty.

There were successful mass protests in 2003 and 2012 that led to government climbdowns.

But campaigns to let Hong Kong pick its own leaders, including the 2014 Umbrella Movement, came to nothing.

Tensions finally exploded in the huge, sometimes violent protests of 2019, which China responded to with a comprehensive crackdown that has transformed the once outspoken city.

- 'Not overkill' -

Critics like Patten, the last British governor, accuse the CCP of betraying its promises to Hong Kong.

"China has ripped up the joint declaration and is vengefully and comprehensively trying to remove the freedoms of Hong Kong because it regards them as a threat, not to the security of China but to the ability of the Chinese Communist Party to hang on to power," Patten told AFP last week.

But former Hong Kong leader Leung Chun-ying said the crackdown over the last three years was "not overkill".

"You can't say, 'We want to have a high degree of autonomy and you stand aside' -- that will be de facto independence of Hong Kong," he told AFP.

Leung, whose administration faced down the Umbrella Movement, blamed years of social and political unrest on people being misled by political figures and misunderstanding Hong Kong's mini-constitution.

He also suggested hostile "external forces" were involved, but declined to be specific.

Echoing Beijing, Leung described One Country, Two Systems as a success and said the arrangement might continue beyond its 50-year term, calling July 1, 2047 "a non-event".

- 'One Country' -

Many Hong Kongers remain unconvinced.

Public confidence in One Country, Two Systems hit a historic low in mid-2020, according to polls carried out by the Hong Kong Public Opinion Research Institute since 1994.

Some, like Herman Yiu, a young politician born in the year of the handover, have lost all hope of ever being able to make change within the system.

"Being born in 1997... it felt like my fate was connected to Hong Kong's fate," Yiu told AFP. "I wanted to participate to make Hong Kong better."

As a fresh graduate, Yiu was part of a pro-democracy landslide at one-person-one-vote district council elections in 2019.

His career was short-lived, though -- in June he became one of the many politicians disqualified from office.

"I think now the emphasis of One Country, Two Systems is on 'one country'," Yiu said.

"I feel helpless, for Hong Kong and myself."

(Y.Berger--BBZ)