SECURITY CLASSIFICATION

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PRIVACY MARKING

In Confidence

DSR 11C (Revised 5/87)

after 30 June 1997, it will no longer be appropriate for

people who are BDTCs by virtue of a connection with Hong

Kong to be described as such after that date. The

British Memorandum associated with the Joint Declaration

provides for such people to acquire a new status, which

will carry benefits similar to those enjoyed by BDTCs,

such as the entitlement to use a British passport and to

receive British consular protection in third countries.

The new status will not, however, be transmissible to

later generations. The British Nationality (Hong Kong)

Order 1986, which was fully debated in Parliament,

created the new status of British National (Overseas)

(BN(0)).

56.

The Hong Kong Government began issuing passports

in the new BN (0) status from 1 July 1987. This was in

order to continue the existing practice of issuing

passports with a 10 year validity and to allow maximum

time for third countries to get used to the new

nationality status. The new BN (0) status will be

acquired by former Hong Kong BDTCs only if they obtain a

British passport in that status before 1 July 1997. The

Government launched a major diplomatic campaign to secure

worldwide acceptance of the new document as a fully valid

British passport. No country has said that it will not

recognise the new BN (0) pasport.

57. The position of the Chinese Government as stated in

the Chinese Memorandum is that all Hong Kong Chinese

compatriots are Chinese nationals. But the Memorandum

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