ECEIVED IN
R GISTRY No. 51
2.971
HKIL 18/10
Foreign and Commonwealth Office
London S.W.1
From The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State
30 September, 1971
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دو
I am sorry I have not been in a position before this to reply to your letter of 26 August about the Hong Kong Immigration Bill.
In 1969 the Hong Kong Government enacted legislation which extended to Commonwealth citizens the controls which it operated, through a system of visas and re-entry permits, over the entry of aliens into the Colony. Controls of this nature over the entry of Commonwealth citizens had already been imposed by most countries, both inside and outside the Commonwealth, and the Hong Kong Government considered at the time that it was necessary in the Colony's own interests that they should take similar action.
The Immigration Bill to which you refer in your letter does not seek to impose any additional restrictions on the freedom of entry into Hong Kong of citizens of the United Kingdom and Colonies. Visas are not necessary in the case of citizens of the United Kingdom and Colonies who hold United Kingdom passports issued in the United Kingdom unless they are issued on behalf of another Government. No change in these requirements is contemplated in consequence of the enactment of the Bill.
However, the Bill does seek, inter alia, to facilitate the removal from the Colony of persons
(including
- 1
PERSONAL AND CONFIDENTIAL
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