EXCHANGES BETWEEN BRITAIN AND CHINA IN 1990 ON CONSTITUTIONAL
DEVELOPMENT
Since there
way
no
youuunt
With
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Chinese officials have claimed that exchanges between
Britain and China in early 1990 added up to an understanding about political development in Hong Kong.
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To set the record straight, we have decided to release the
texts of the relevant messages. The Chinese side have been
informed. These documents show that:
China on
the coposition of
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there was no agreement or understanding between the UK
electoral arrangements for 1995 and China on [the political development of] Hong Kong; we made clear repeatedly our dissatisfaction at the
Chinese proposals for the number of directly-elected
seats in the Legislative Council. We made plain that
we intended to continue to press for a faster rate of
increase in the number of these seats;
at the end of these exchanges, the question of electoral
arrangements in Hong Kong up to 1997 remained open;
this was the broader context for the discussion of the
composition of the Election Committee which, under the
Basic Law, would elect 10 members of the Legislative
Council. The final version of the Basic Law was not
satisfactory on this point because it did not spell out
the five principles agreed between the two sides as a
framework for the Election Committee. Nor did it make
clear the composition of the Election Committee for the
Legislature in 1997.
The Governor therefore had no alternative but to make
proposals of his own consistent with the five principles. for the Election Committee.]
the Election Connitte
exchanges.CON.bern