Foreign and Commonwealui mee

London SW1A 2AH

21 August 1989

From The Minister of State

The Hon Fancis Maude MP

Matthew Taylor Esq MP House of Commons

London

SWLA OAA

Der Natthew,

Thank you for your letter of 26 July to John Major, on behalf of a member of the Royal Hong Kong Police Forco, about the possibility of voluntary retirement with pension before 1997.

I appreciate his concerns. But it remains true that Section IV of Annex I of the Joint Declaration ensures that all public servants may remain in employment and continue their service after the establishment of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region on 1 July 1997. The Joint Declaration also stipulates that employment (and pensions) will be on terms no less favourable than before. It will be a matter of personal choice whether an individual chooses to leave or to stay on.

I do not in any case agree that after 1997 he would be working for the Chinese authorities: the Joint Declaration provides for a high degree of autonomy for Hong Kong after 1997 and for Hong Kong to be run by Hong Kong people.

We do not therefore envisage a general scheme to enable expatriate police officers to retire with pensions on or before 1997. On the contrary, our efforts will be devoted to encouraging pensionable expatriate officers to stay on after the transfer of sovereignty, in the interests of continuity.

He clai: hat local officers are being given preference over extates for promotion. It has for some years been thlicy of the Hong Kong Government to increase the num of local officers in the gazetted officer ranks. But the proportion of local officers in senior ranks is growing as the force expands and as expatriates

Promotion retire and are succeeded by local officers. for all is on merit but arrangements have been made to compensate any expatriate officer whose promotion might

It has so far. be blocked by the policy of localisation. never been necessary to activate these arrangements.

Francis Maude

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