CO129-297 - Governor Sir Blake - 1900 [1-3] — Page 148

CO129 Colonial Office Hong Kong Records 理藩院香港檔案 All AI Reviewed

3

146

so attached may, if a Magistrate in his discretion shall so order, be forfeited to the Crown, &c.

9.- The object in view in passing this Ordinance and the reasons which have appeared to His Excellency the Governor to justify the conferring of such very extraordinary and highly unconstitutional powers on the Registrar General are fully set forth in the speech of His Excellency in the Legislative Council when the Bill was before the Council on its second reading. I enclose a copy of said speech from the local Hansard, a publication which has the advantage of having its reports of speeches in the Council corrected by the speakers.

According to His Excellency's statement the sole object of the Ordinance is to enable the Chinese residents in the New Territories to be compelled, under penalties, to give all particulars about their holdings and titles, some reluctance having been shown by the inhabitants in registering their lands and attending when summoned by the Registrar General to receive his explanations on the subject. The inhabitants of the New Territories have been slow to come in and register their lands.

The cause of this slowness is supposed to be due to their ignorance and their suspicions as to the possible dangers to themselves if they register. The Government is naturally desirous of enlightening their ignorance, dissipating their suspicions, and have invited the men to come into Hongkong and have their difficulties explained away.

May I point out that the Government when inviting these poor people, and they are mostly all of the very poorest of the agricultural class, to come into Hongkong has never offered to pay either the cost of their passage to and fro, nor the expenses of their detention in Hongkong, nor any compensation for any loss of their time. Many of these men would have a journey of ten or fifteen or twenty or even more miles over hills or by sea.

It has not been made clear that the Government has done everything that was reasonably possible to do to enlighten the men by Proclamations posted in their respective villages or by the publication or distribution of leaflets. These people are amongst the

Edit History

2026-05-31 17:12:39 · NVIDIA / meta/llama-4-maverick-17b-128e-instruct
Live
View comparison
AI Proofread
3 146 so attached may, if a Magistrate in his discretion shall so order, be forfeited to the Crown, &c. 9.- The object in view in passing this Ordinance and the reasons which have appeared to His Excellency the Governor to justify the conferring of such very extraordinary and highly unconstitutional powers on the Registrar General are fully set forth in the speech of His Excellency in the Legislative Council when the Bill was before the Council on its second reading. I enclose a copy of said speech from the local Hansard, a publication which has the advantage of having its reports of speeches in the Council corrected by the speakers. According to His Excellency's statement the sole object of the Ordinance is to enable the Chinese residents in the New Territories to be compelled, under penalties, to give all particulars about their holdings and titles, some reluctance having been shown by the inhabitants in registering their lands and attending when summoned by the Registrar General to receive his explanations on the subject. The inhabitants of the New Territories have been slow to come in and register their lands. The cause of this slowness is supposed to be due to their ignorance and their suspicions as to the possible dangers to themselves if they register. The Government is naturally desirous of enlightening their ignorance, dissipating their suspicions, and have invited the men to come into Hongkong and have their difficulties explained away. May I point out that the Government when inviting these poor people, and they are mostly all of the very poorest of the agricultural class, to come into Hongkong has never offered to pay either the cost of their passage to and fro, nor the expenses of their detention in Hongkong, nor any compensation for any loss of their time. Many of these men would have a journey of ten or fifteen or twenty or even more miles over hills or by sea. It has not been made clear that the Government has done everything that was reasonably possible to do to enlighten the men by Proclamations posted in their respective villages or by the publication or distribution of leaflets. These people are amongst the
Baseline (Original)
རྞྞ* 3 146 so attached may, if a Magistrate in his discretion shall so order, be forfeited to the Crown, &c. 9.- The object in view in passing this Ordinance and the reasons which have appeared to His Excellency the Governor to justify the conferring of such very extraordinary and highly unconstitutional powers on the Registrar General are fully set forth in the speech of His Excellency in the Legislative Coun- cil when the Bill was before the Council on its second read- ing. I enclose a copy of said speech from the local Hansard, a publication which has the advantage of having its reports of speeches in the Council corrected by the speakers. Accord- ing to His Excellency's statement the sole object of the Ordi- nance is to enable the Chinese residents in the New Territo- ries to be compelled, under penalties, to give all particulars about their holdings and titles, some reluctance having been shown by the inhabitants in registering their lands and attend ing when summoned by the Registrar General to receive his ex- planations on the subject. The inhabitants of the New Terri- tories have been slow to come in and register their lands. The cause of this slowness is supposed to be due to their ig- norance and their suspicions as to the possible dangers to themselves if they register. The Government is naturally de- sirous of enlightening their ignorance, dissipating their sus- picions, and have invited the men to come into Hongkong and have their difficulties explained away. May I point out that the Government when inviting these poor people and they are mostly all of the very poorest of the agricultural class to come into Hongkong has never offered to pay either the cost of their passage to and fro, nor the expenses of their deten- tion in Hongkong, not any compensation for any loss of their time. Many of these men would have a journey of ten or fifteen or twenty or even more miles over hills or by sea. It has not been made clear that the Government has done everything that was reasonably possible to do to enlighten the men by Proclama tions posted in their respective villages or by the publica- tion or distribution of leaflets. These people are amongst the
2026-05-31 17:12:39 · Baseline
View content

རྞྞ*

3

146

so attached may, if a Magistrate in his discretion shall so order, be forfeited to the Crown, &c.

9.- The object in view in passing this Ordinance and the reasons which have appeared to His Excellency the Governor to justify the conferring of such very extraordinary and highly unconstitutional powers on the Registrar General are fully set forth in the speech of His Excellency in the Legislative Coun-

cil when the Bill was before the Council on its second read-

ing. I enclose a copy of said speech from the local Hansard,

a publication which has the advantage of having its reports

of speeches in the Council corrected by the speakers. Accord-

ing to His Excellency's statement the sole object of the Ordi-

nance is to enable the Chinese residents in the New Territo-

ries to be compelled, under penalties, to give all particulars

about their holdings and titles, some reluctance having been

shown by the inhabitants in registering their lands and attend

ing when summoned by the Registrar General to receive his ex-

planations on the subject. The inhabitants of the New Terri-

tories have been slow to come in and register their lands.

The cause of this slowness is supposed to be due to their ig-

norance and their suspicions as to the possible dangers to

themselves if they register. The Government is naturally de-

sirous of enlightening their ignorance, dissipating their sus-

picions, and have invited the men to come into Hongkong and

have their difficulties explained away. May I point out that

the Government when inviting these poor people and they are

mostly all of the very poorest of the agricultural class to

come into Hongkong has never offered to pay either the cost

of their passage to and fro, nor the expenses of their deten-

tion in Hongkong, not any compensation for any loss of their

time. Many of these men would have a journey of ten or fifteen

or twenty or even more miles over hills or by sea. It has not

been made clear that the Government has done everything that

was reasonably possible to do to enlighten the men by Proclama tions posted in their respective villages or by the publica-

tion or distribution of leaflets. These people are amongst

the

Comments

Approved members can add comments, bookmarks, and private notes.

No comments yet.

Private Research Note

Private notes are available after approval.