CO129-321 - Public Offices & Others - 1903 — Page 269

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

265

for the surrender of Chinese from Hongkong to China.

There is, however, a reciprocal arrangement for

extradition in the Burmah-Yunnan Frontier Convention

of March 1st, 1894, as there were at the time no British Consular officers in the districts adjoining that

frontier. It was intended to apply to Chinese on

the one side and Burmese on the other.

Neither party is bound by this arrangement to surrender its own nationals, and the Chinese Government would, if a reciprocal Extradition arrangement were at any time negotiated, be entitled to make a reservation as to surrendering Chinese subjects.

Such a reservation would certainly be made use of by them in a case like that which has now arisen.

I am further to state that His Majesty's Government have recently refused to hand over to the Chinese Authorities two criminals who admit having published articles inciting to the murder of the Emperor of China, although the offence has been committed on Chinese territory assigned under agreement for the residence of Europeans.

It would seem therefore to be altogether inconsistent to demand from the Chinese Government the surrender of Chinese subjects who are accused of crime in a British Colony. The reply of the Chinese Government to such an application would be obvious and in Lord Lansdowne's opinion unanswerable.

It may be mentioned that, as a matter of principle, it has, on more than one occasion, been deemed inexpedient to ask for the surrender of a fugitive Criminal in the absence of express Treaty stipulations providing for such a course, and in view of all these considerations, it appears to His Lordship that it would be inopportune for His Majesty's Minister at Pekin to make a representation to the Chinese Government in the sense suggested in your letter.

I am,

Sir,

Your most obedient,

humble Servant,

Charles Hardinge

Edit History

2026-06-01 13:06:52 · NVIDIA / meta/llama-4-maverick-17b-128e-instruct
Live
View comparison
AI Proofread
265 for the surrender of Chinese from Hongkong to China. There is, however, a reciprocal arrangement for extradition in the Burmah-Yunnan Frontier Convention of March 1st, 1894, as there were at the time no British Consular officers in the districts adjoining that frontier. It was intended to apply to Chinese on the one side and Burmese on the other. Neither party is bound by this arrangement to surrender its own nationals, and the Chinese Government would, if a reciprocal Extradition arrangement were at any time negotiated, be entitled to make a reservation as to surrendering Chinese subjects. Such a reservation would certainly be made use of by them in a case like that which has now arisen. I am further to state that His Majesty's Government have recently refused to hand over to the Chinese Authorities two criminals who admit having published articles inciting to the murder of the Emperor of China, although the offence has been committed on Chinese territory assigned under agreement for the residence of Europeans. It would seem therefore to be altogether inconsistent to demand from the Chinese Government the surrender of Chinese subjects who are accused of crime in a British Colony. The reply of the Chinese Government to such an application would be obvious and in Lord Lansdowne's opinion unanswerable. It may be mentioned that, as a matter of principle, it has, on more than one occasion, been deemed inexpedient to ask for the surrender of a fugitive Criminal in the absence of express Treaty stipulations providing for such a course, and in view of all these considerations, it appears to His Lordship that it would be inopportune for His Majesty's Minister at Pekin to make a representation to the Chinese Government in the sense suggested in your letter. I am, Sir, Your most obedient, humble Servant, Charles Hardinge
Baseline (Original)
265 for the surrender of Chinese from Hongkong to China. There is, however, a reciprocal arrangement for extradition in the Burmah-Yunnan Frontier Convention of March 1st. 1894, as there were at the time no Bri- tish Consular officers in the districts adjoining that frontier. It was intended to apply to Chinese on the one side and Burmese on the other. Neither par- ty is bound by this arrangement to surrender its ownI nationals, and the Chinese Government would, if a re- ciprocal Extradition arrangement were at any time ne- gotiated, be entitled to make a reservation as to sur- rendering Chinese subjects. Such a reservation would certainly be made use of by them in a case like that which has now arisen. I am further to state that His Majesty's Govern- ment have recently refused to hand over to the Chinese Authorities two criminals who admit having published articles inciting to the murder of the Emperor of China, although the offence has been committed on Chinese territory assigned under agreement for the residence of Europeans. It would seem therefore to C be altogether inconsistent to demand from the Chinese Government the surrender of Chinese subjects who are accused of crime in a British Colony. The reply of the Chinese Government to such an application would be obvious and in Lord Lansdowne's opinion unanswerable. It may be mentioned that, as a matter of prin- ciple, it has, on more than one occasion, been deemed inexpedient to ask for the surrender of a fugitive Criminal in the absence of express Treaty stipulations providing for such a course, and in view of all these considerations, it appears to His Lordship that it would be inopportune for His Majesty's Minister at Pekin to make a representation to the Chinese Govern- ment in the sense suggested in your letter. I am, sir, Your most obedient, humble Servant, Charles Hending be
2026-06-01 13:06:52 · Baseline
View content

265

for the surrender of Chinese from Hongkong to China.

There is, however, a reciprocal arrangement for

extradition in the Burmah-Yunnan Frontier Convention

of March 1st. 1894, as there were at the time no Bri-

tish Consular officers in the districts adjoining that

frontier. It was intended to apply to Chinese on

the one side and Burmese on the other.

Neither par-

ty is bound by this arrangement to surrender its ownI

nationals, and the Chinese Government would, if a re-

ciprocal Extradition arrangement were at any time ne-

gotiated, be entitled to make a reservation as to sur-

rendering Chinese subjects.

Such a reservation would

certainly be made use of by them in a case like that

which has now arisen.

I am further to state that His Majesty's Govern-

ment have recently refused to hand over to the Chinese

Authorities two criminals who admit having published

articles inciting to the murder of the Emperor of

China, although the offence has been committed on

Chinese territory assigned under agreement for the

residence of Europeans.

It would seem therefore to

C

be altogether inconsistent to demand from the Chinese

Government the surrender of Chinese subjects who are

accused of crime in a British Colony. The reply of

the Chinese Government to such an application would be

obvious and in Lord Lansdowne's opinion unanswerable.

It may be mentioned that, as a matter of prin-

ciple, it has, on more than one occasion, been deemed

inexpedient to ask for the surrender of a fugitive

Criminal in the absence of express Treaty stipulations

providing for such a course, and in view of all these

considerations, it appears to His Lordship that it

would be inopportune for His Majesty's Minister at

Pekin to make a representation to the Chinese Govern-

ment in the sense suggested in your letter.

I am,

sir,

Your most obedient,

humble Servant,

Charles Hending

be

Comments

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

No comments yet.

Private Research Note

Private notes are available after approval.