TNAG-2038-FCO40-2902-Ministerial-visits-from-the-UK-to-Hong-Kong-1991 — Page 52

FCO40 Hong Kong Department Records 聯邦事務部香港部檔案 All

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THE ORIGINAL HAS BEEN CLOSED UNDER

FOI EXEMPTION NO 271

district-based electoral college constituencies

9. Following the events in early June 1989 in China there

was

growing pressure in Hong Kong for a faster pace of democratisation than was set out in the 1988 White Paper

The unofficial members of the Executive and Legislative Councils CMELCO; recommended on 27 July that one third of the Legislative Council should be directly elected in 1991 and that there should be no less than 50% directly elected. members of Legco in 1995 (which would run through 1997). However these percentages were higher than was provided for in the second draft of the Basic Law, which only envisaged

15 seats

1.

On 16 February 1990. the

Foreign and Commonwealth Secretary announced the

Government's intention to introduce 18 directly elected

seats in 1991 and at least 20 in 1995. - This is a

substantially greater first step towards full democracy in Hong Kong than was planned two years ago'. It is only two seats less than OMELCO recommended and is eight seats more than the 10 seats which were originally envisaged in 1988. The final version of the Basic Law provided further progression from 1997 onwards, rising to 24 seats in 1999

and 30 seats (fifty percent of the legislature the remainder being indirectly elected members) in 2003, with the possibility that full direct elections could be

introduced in 2007.

-

10. Most people in Hong Kong welcome the fact that a clear direction has now been set and that a major uncertainty for

the future of the territory has been removed. This reaction was reflected in the positive and forward-looking statement issued by OMELCO in February. The community in Hong Kong

WINADY/5

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