TNAG-2482-FCO40-3613-Correspondence-from-MPs-regarding-Hong-Kong-1992 — Page 5

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

MNB 236/2

pr. 18 (MP Letter)

Foreign & Commonwealth

Office

London SWIA 2AH

23 December 1992

Michael Spicer, Esq, MP

House of Commons

LONDON

SWLA OAA

From The Minister of State

23/12.

Dear Michael

Thank you for your letter of 10 December enclosing one from your constituent, Mr Douglas Drane of 'Eboracum', Bredon, Tewkesbury in Gloucestershire. You might like to send Mr Drane the enclosed note, which sets out why representative government was not introduced in Hong Kong earlier.

Mr Drane's idea of resettling the whole population of Hong Kong somewhere else in the world has cropped up before. Apart from the essential impracticality of it, the main reason against it is the fact that the majority of the population of Hong Kong do not wish to leave the territory.

The British Government's task is to ensure that Hong Kong's unique way of life, built up, as Mr Drane says, through the skill and enterprise of its people and based on the rule of law and a sound, effective administration, is preserved in the future. The 1984 Sino-British Joint Declaration, with its imaginative principle of "one country, two systems", provides for the continuation of Hong Kong's existing legal, social and economic system for at least 50 years after 1997. The Joint Declaration is an internationally binding agreement, which is lodged with the United Nations.

ALASTAIR GOODLAD

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