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The feeling that Hong Kong is a nuisance to Britain
thus maintaining an official majority.
There are the
usual reservations to the Crown of the power of disallowance
and of the power to legislate by Order in Council for the
peace, order and good government of the Colony.
RELATIONS WITH UNITED KINGDOM
5. The combination described above of constitutional infancy
on the one hand and economic sophistication and adulthood on
the other has had a somewhat unfortunate effect on United
Kingdom Hong Kong relations during the past decade.
6. There has been a growing feeling in Hong Kong that Britain,
so far from being proud of Hong Kong's achievements, regards
the Colony as a nuisance and an impediment. In the post-war
years we left Hong Kong to grapple alone (without significant
financial assistance) with the tremendous problems posed by
the influx of refugees from China. At the same time we are
seen in Hong Kong as having dealt the Colony a series of blows
to its trade and finances: the restrictions on its exports of
cotton textiles to this country since 1959, the import
surcharge (1964), the increase in the defence contribution
(1966), devaluation (1967), the import deposit scheme (1968),
and the decision to impose tariffs rather than quotas on
cotton textile imports from the Commonwealth (with effect from
1 January 1972). Our actions are seen as showing a lack of
concern for Hong Kong's interests and for her special
problems; as indicating an indifference to the special ties
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