1
HONG KONG DEFENCE COSTS NEGOTIATIONS CCTOBER 1975
LONG FONG - FOLITICAL
BRIEF G
HONG KONG CONSTITUTION
Status
1.
Hong Kong is a Colony consisting of three areas:-
(a) Hong Kong Island, which China ceded to Britain in perpetuity
in 1842 by the Treaty of Nanking.
(b) Kowloon and Stonecutters Island which were similarly ceded
in 1860 by the first Convention of Peking.
(c)
The New Territories which China leased to Britain for 99 years in 1898 by the second Convention of Peking.
The Formal Constituition
2. As a Colony the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs is directly responsible to Parliament for the government of
Hong Kong. The Constitution is contained in the Letters Patent and
Royal Instructions.
3. Under the Constitution,
the Governor has wide powers. These include the power to make laws (called Ordinances in Hong Kong) for
the "peace, order and good government of the Colony", However, the Crown reserves the power of disallowance in respect of all Ordinances enacted in Hong Kong
and also the power to legislate
for the Colony by Orders in Council where this may be considered
necessary.
4. The Governor is advised by an Executive Council (known as 3xCo) of 14 members comprising the 5 ex-officio members and 9 others who may be either official (ie a member of the Hong Kong Government) or
unofficial. The ex-officio members are:- the Commander of the British Forces, the Colonial Secretary, the Attorney General, the Secretary for Home Affairs and the Financial Secretary of the Colony.
at present, wore is one other official member the Director of Medical
and Health Services - and 8 other unofficial members, all of whom are appointed by the Governor, with the consent of HMG, for terms of five
IAL
*
/years
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