TNAG-2186-FCO40-3123-Ethnic-minorities-in-Hong-Kong-1990 — Page 41

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

x Ms Joyce Quin MP

House of Commons London SWLA OAA

HKD

RECEIV

DESK INDEX

-

340/2

OCT 1990

FICKK

Issu

PA

Aulien raken

X

X

X

Thank you for your letter of 30 November to me about the non Chinese ethnic minorities in Hong Kong and the representations by the Council of Hong Kong Indian Associations.

made on their behal

Douglas Hurd had the opportunity to discuss these

concerns with a delegation from the Council of Hong Kong

Indian Associations in London in November, and His Parliamentary Private Secretary,/Tim Yeo, also met them in Hong Kong on 16 January.

We have taken very careful note of all the representations on this issue. In reaching the decision which was announced to the House on 20 December, the

we Government took fully into/account the arguments put to us by the Council on behalf of the non-ethnic Chinese minorities. We concluded that we could not treat this group as a special category within the scheme: the non-ethnic Chinese minorities will be eligible to apply for British citizenship under the scheme and each application will be treated on its merits.

As you know, in recognition of the particular concern of the ethnic minorities in Hong Kong, the Government have already taken steps to reassure them about their position after 1997. We have made provision for the children and grandchildren of former BDTCs born after 1997 to acquire British Overseas Citizenship if they would otherwise be stateless. And we have also given a specific assurance in Parliament that if, against all expectations, the ethnic minorities came under pressure to leave Hong Kong in the future, and had nowhere to go, we would expect the × Government of the day to consider their case for

admission here with considerable and particular sympathy. We stand by that undertaking.

The Council have also expressed concern about the absence of clear provisions on how non-Chinese people can prove that they have taken Hong Kong as their place of permanent residence. The Joint Declaration makes explicit provision for non-Chinese people to have right of abode in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region and this is fully reflected in Article 24(4) of the draft

ALFACB

02

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