EID
Expatriate Inspector's Association
Mr Struc
pl courdinck a
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Suitable doelt reply
Right Honourable Douglas Hurd Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs
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C.B.E., M.P.
Sir,
The following paragraphs will outline some main areas of concern to members of the Expatriate Inspectors' Association of the Royal Hong Kong Police Force which are heightened by the lack of progress in obtaining answers from Her Majesty's Government.
Nationality
1
Irrespective of the Hong
Hong Kong
Kong Government's mistaken belief that
Nationality is of no concern to this Association; we would point out that many of our members are experiencing problems in obtaining the right of abode for their
spouses in the United Kingdom.
We have seen correspondence which states that a Police Officer serving in the Royal Hong Kong Police Force may be deemed to be in 'a Service specially designated under Section 2 (3) of the British Nationality Act 1981', however there
has been no definitive statement to the effect that Police Officers recruited in
the United Kingdom are in either Crown Service Or in a service that has been
specially designated.
The lack of this definitive statement is becoming a matter of considerable concern to the extent that officers are seriously considering leaving the service of the Royal Hong Kong Police Force and returning to the United Kingdom to obtain the necessary residential qualification for their spouses.
Membership of Her Majesty's Overseas Civil Service (HMOCS)
There are considerable fears for the future of the Expatriate Inspectorate and those Association members who are enrolled in HMOCS are naturally looking to that body to provide security since it is the assessment of the Expatriate Inspectors'
Royal Hong Kong Police Headquarters, Arsenal Street, Hong Kong.
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