wish to provoke China into challenging the status quo in pursuit of her standing claim to sovereignty over Hong Kong.
3.
The Hong Kong Government therefore sought to develop
greater popular participation in public affairs through a
network of consultation boards and committees, which provided advice on all areas of government activity. Elected representation at local level was enhanced in 1973 with the establishment of the Urban Council, as a statutory body with financial autonomy and a mix of elected and appointed members. In 1982 the District Boards were established as statutory
bodies on a territory-wide basis. The development of the local administrative structure was completed in 1986, with the
establishment of the Regional Council with functions in the New
Territories comparable to those of the Urban Council. Elections to a proportion of the seats on these bodies were on a geographical constituency basis, with all residents of
21 years or over who had lived in Hong Kong for 7 years having
the vote.
b) 1984-1991
4. Two issues in particular stimulated demand for a faster pace of democratisation. First, the Sino-British negotiations
over the future of Hong Kong which culminated in the Joint
Declaration signed in 1984. Second, the events of Tiananmen Square in 1989.
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would be
5. The Joint Declaration set the broad framework for Hong
Kong's democratic development. It laid down that the Legislature still fully appointed in 1984
"constituted by elections" in 1997. With that framework in
place, the Hong Kong Government issued a Green Paper as a basis
for public consultation on the next stage of development of representative government. The subsequent White Paper
statememt26.8/BRIEFS/NJH
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