italics
kitchen', that is an alternative centre of authority for
There could be little doubt of the
the
territory.
seriousness of these warnings; which, if implemented,
would mean that the reforms could at best bring two years of
improved democracy, after the 1995 elections, to be
followed by an indefinite period of a more repressive
system. To this had to be added the effect of divided
authority in the remaining years of British rule and, most
worrying of all, the strain on the Chinese commitment to the
Joint Declaration itself.
On the British side, there were repeated
assurances of readiness for discussion; but at the same
time the government expressed their full backing for Mr
Patten; and the Foreign Secretary stated that the days of
negotiation with Peking over the head of Hong Kong were
past. In Hong Kong the Governor was criticized by the
business community. Otherwise he enjoyed much personal
support, though this was coupled with a strong popular wish
that confrontation with China should be avoided, a typical
Hong Kong combination. In Britain itself attitudes were
less nuancé. The press preferred to portray the issue in the
terms of a simple morality play, in which the Governor
fought the good fight against the wicked Chinese in the
cause of democracy. The fact that the struggle took place
over the body of Hong Kong, and the likely effect on Hong
Kong if the reforms were made law and the Chinese threats
were put into operation, were aspects that received less
attention.
By the end of 1992 Sino-British relations had
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