TNAG-2456-FCO40-3577-Future-of-Hong-Kong-constitutional-development-presentation-1992 — Page 20

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

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On the political front, Mr Ashdown (whom the Governor briefed during his recent visit to Hong Kong) described the speech as "imaginative, forward-looking and robust". He expressed some doubts about separation of ExCo and LegCo, but accepted that the new Government-LegCo Committee could be a workable alternative to liberal representation on ExCo. The only comment we have seen from the Labour Party was from their spokesman on Hong Kong, Mr Allan Rogers, who gave the speech a qualified welcome, commenting that it should have gone further on democracy.

Their

Chinese spokesmen have been slow off the mark.

only response on the day of the speech was a low-level comment from the New China News Agency in Hong Kong describing it as "irresponsible and reckless". Since then, there have been statements from the Ministry of Foreign

Affairs on 8 October and the Hong Kong and Macau Office of

the State Council on 9 October, both replayed in the

pro-China press in Hong Kong. These suggest an uncertain

reaction. The main criticisms are that:

the Governor has announced large changes without

consulting the Chinese in breach of the terms and spirit of

the Joint Declaration.

this can only put obstacles in the way of smooth

transition.

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there will be chaos if changes are introduced which do

not "converge with" the Basic Law.

when the time comes, the Special Administrative Region

Government will be established according to the Basic Law.

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