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A Brief History
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In the popular mind, the history of Hong Kong, long the
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entryway to China for Westerners, begins in 1841 with the British
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occupation of the territory. However, it would be wrong to dismiss the
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long history of the region itself. Archaeologists today are working to
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uncover Hong Kong’s past, which stretches back thousands of years. You
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can get a glimpse into that past at Lei Cheng Uk Museum’s
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1,600-year-old burial vault on the mainland just north of Kowloon (see
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page 38). In 1992, when construction of the airport on Chek Lap Kok was
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begun, a 2,000-year-old village, Pak Mong, was discovered, complete
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with artifacts that indicated a sophisticated rural society. An even
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older Stone Age site was discovered on Lamma Island in 1996.
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While Hong Kong remained a relative backwater in early days,
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nearby Guangzhou (Canton) was developing into a great trading city with
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connections in India and the Middle East. By a.d. 900, the Hong Kong
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islands had become a lair for pirates preying on the shipping in the
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Pearl River Delta and causing a major headache for burgeoning
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Guangzhou; small bands of pirates were still operating into the early
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years of the 20th century.
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In the meantime, the mainland area was being settled by
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incomers, the “Five Great Clans”: Tang, Hau, Pang, Liu, and Man. First
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to arrive was the Tang clan, which established a number of walled
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villages in the New Territories that still exist today. You can visit
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Kat Hing Wai and Lo Wai, villages with their walls still intact.
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Adjacent to Lo Wai is the Tang Chung Ling Ancestral Hall, built in the
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16th century, which is still the center of clan activities.
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The first Europeans to arrive in the Pearl River Delta were
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the Portuguese, who settled in Macau in 1557 and for several centuries
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had a monopoly on trade between Asia, Europe, and South America. As
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Macau developed into the greatest port in the East, it also became a
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base for Jesuit missionaries; it was later a haven for persecuted
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Japanese Christians. While Christianity was not a great success in
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China, it made local headway, evidenced today by the numerous Catholic
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churches in Macau’s historic center. Intermarriage with the local
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Chinese created a community of Macanese, whose culture can still be
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seen in Macau’s architecture and cuisine.
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The British Arrive
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“ Albert is so amused,” wrote Queen Victoria, “at my having
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got the island of Hong Kong. ” Her foreign secretary, Lord Palmerston,
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was not so amused; he dismissed Hong Kong as “a barren island with
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hardly a house upon it. ”
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Hong Kong Island formally became a British possession two
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years later in 1843. The British now had a base for the thriving trade
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they had carried on from Canton. Trading conditions, however, were not
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easy. The attitude expressed by Emperor Qianlong at Britian’s first
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attempt to open trade with China in 1793 continued to prevail: “We
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possess all things,” said the emperor, “I set no value on objects
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strange or ingenious, and have no use for your country’s manufactures.”
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Moreover, China would accept nothing but silver bullion in
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exchange for its goods, so Britian had to look for a more abundant
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commodity to square its accounts. Around the end of the 18th century,
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the traders found a solution: Opium was the wonder drug that would
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solve the problem. Grown in India, it was delivered to Canton, and
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while China outlawed the trade in 1799, local Cantonese officials were
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always willing to look the other way for “squeeze money” (a term still
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used in Hong Kong).
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In 1839 the emperor appointed the incorruptible
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Commissioner Lin Tse-hsu to stamp out the smuggling of “foreign mud. ”
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Lin’s crackdown was indeed severe. He demanded that the British
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merchants in Canton surrender their opium stores, and to back up his
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ultimatum he laid siege to the traders, who, after six tense weeks,
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surrendered over 20,000 chests of opium. To Queen Victoria, Lin
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addressed a famous letter, pointing out the harm the “poisonous drug”
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did to China, and asking for an end to the opium trade; his arguments
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are unanswerable, but the lofty though heartfelt tone of the letter
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shows how unprepared the Chinese were to negotiate with the West in
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realistic terms.
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A year later, in June 1840, came the British retaliation,
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beginning the first of the so-called Opium Wars. After a few skirmishes
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and much negotiation, a peace agreement was reached. Under the
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Convention of Chuenpi, Britain was given the island of Hong Kong, and
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on 26 January 1841, it was proclaimed a British colony.
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The Opium Wars
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The peace plan achieved at Chuenpi was short-lived. Both
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Peking and London repudiated the agreement, and fighting resumed. This
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time the British forces, less than 3,000 strong but in possession of
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superior weapons and tactics, outfought the Chinese. Shanghai fell and
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Nanking was threatened. In the Treaty of Nanking (1842) China was
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compelled to open five of its ports to foreign economic and political
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penetration, and even to compensate the opium smugglers for their
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losses. Hong Kong’s status as a British colony and a free port was
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confirmed.
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In the aftermath of the Opium Wars, trade in “foreign mud”
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was resumed at a level even higher than before, although the major
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traders, by now respectable and diversified, stopped their trading in
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1907. Opium-smoking continued openly in Hong Kong until 1946; in
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mainland China the Communist government abolished it when they came to
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power in 1949.
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Commerce and Wealth
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The first governor of Hong Kong, Sir Henry Pottinger,
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predicted it would become “a vast emporium of commerce and wealth. ”
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Under his direction, Hong Kong began its march toward prosperity. It
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was soon flourishing; with its natural harbor that attracted ships,
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Hong Kong leaped to the forefront as a base for trade. Both the
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population and the economy began to grow steadily. A surprise was the
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sizable number of Chinese who chose to move to the colony.
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In the meantime, the opening of Hong Kong was the last blow
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to Macau’s prosperity. Inroads had already been made by the arrival of
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the Dutch and Macau’s loss to them of the profitable Japanese trade.
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From then on, until its 1970s comeback with electronic and other export
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goods, Macau sank into obscurity.
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Despite the differences between the Chinese majority and
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the European minority, relations were generally cordial. Sir John
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Francis Davis, an early governor, disgusted with the squabbling of the
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English residents, declared: “It is a much easier task to govern the
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20,000 Chinese inhabitants of the colony than the few hundreds of
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English.”
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There were a few incidents: On 15 January 1857, somebody
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added an extra ingredient to the dough at the colony’s main
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bakery — arsenic. While the Chinese continued to enjoy their daily
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rice, the British, eating their daily bread, were dropping like flies.
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At the height of the panic, thousands of Chinese were deported from
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Hong Kong. No one ever discovered the identity or the motive of the
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culprits.
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Conditions in the colony in the 19th century, however, did
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not favor the Chinese population. The British lived along the
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waterfront in Victoria (now Central) and on the cooler slopes of
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Victoria Peak. The Chinese were barred from these areas, and from any
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European neighborhood. They settled in what is now known as the Western
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District. It was not uncommon for several families and their animals to
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share one room in crowded shantytowns. So it is not surprising that
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when bubonic plague struck in 1894, it took nearly 30 years to fully
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eradicate it. Today in the Western District, you can still wander
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narrow streets lined with small traditional shops selling ginseng,
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medicinal herbs, incense, tea, and funeral objects.
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In 1860, a treaty gave Britain a permanent beach-head on
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the Chinese mainland — the Kowloon peninsula, directly across Victoria
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harbor. In 1898, under the Convention of Peking, China leased the New
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Territories and 235 more islands to Britain for what then seemed an
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eternity — 99 years.
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The 20th Century
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The colony’s population has always fluctuated according to
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events beyond its borders. In 1911, when the Chinese revolution
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overthrew the Manchus, refugees flocked to the safety of Hong Kong.
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Many arrived with nothing but the shirts on their backs, but they
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brought their philosophy of working hard and seizing opportunity.
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Hundreds of thousands more arrived in the 1930s when Japan invaded
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China. By the eve of World War II, the population was more than one and
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a half million.
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A few hours after Japan’s attack on the American fleet at
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Pearl Harbor in December 1941, a dozen Japanese battalions began an
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assault on Hong Kong; Hong Kong’s minimal air force was destroyed on
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the airfield at Kai Tak within five minutes. Abandoning the New
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Territories and Kowloon, the defenders retreated to Hong Kong island,
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hoping for relief which never came. They finally surrendered on
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Christmas Day in 1941. Survivors recall three and a half years of
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hunger and hardship under the occupation forces, who deported many Hong
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Kong Chinese to the mainland. A number of Hong Kong’s monuments were
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damaged during this time: St. John’s Cathedral was turned into a
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military club, the old governor’s lodge on the Peak was burned down,
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and the commandant of the occupation forces rebuilt the colonial
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governor’s mansion in Japanese style.
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At the end of World War II, Hong Kong took stock of what
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remained — the population was down to half a million, and there was no
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industry, no fishing fleet, and few houses and public services.
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Hong Kong Comes Back
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China’s civil war sent distressing echoes to Hong Kong.
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While the Chinese Communist armies drove towards the south, the flow of
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refugees into Hong Kong multiplied, and by the time the People’s
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Republic of China was proclaimed in 1949, the total population of Hong
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Kong had grown to more than two million people. The fall of Shanghai in
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1950 brought another flood of refugees, among them many wealthy people
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and skilled artisans, including the Shanghai industrialists who became
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the founders of Hong Kong’s now famous textile industry. In the late
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1970s Hong Kong became the conduit for China’s goods, investment, and
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tourism. It also found itself famous as a worldwide bargain shopping
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center.
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Housing was now in desperately short supply. Housing had
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always been scarce for Hong Kong’s Chinese. The problem became an
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outright disaster on Christmas Day in 1953. An uncontrollable fire
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devoured a whole city of squatters’ shacks in Kowloon; 50,000 refugees
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were deprived of shelter. The calamity spurred the government to launch
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an emergency program of public-housing construction; spartan new blocks
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of apartments put cheap and fireproof roofs over hundreds of thousands
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of heads. But this new housing was grimly overcrowded, and even a
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frenzy of construction couldn’t keep pace with the demand for living
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space. In 1962 the colonial authorities closed the border with China,
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but even this did not altogether stem the flow of refugees: The next
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arrivals were the Vietnamese boat people.
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Into the 21st Century
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As 1997 drew nearer, it became clear that the Chinese
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government had no intention of renewing the 99-year lease on the New
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Territories. Negotiations began, and in 1984 Prime Minister Margaret
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Thatcher signed the Sino-British Joint Declaration, in which Britain
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confirmed the transfer of the New Territories and all of Hong Kong to
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China in 1997. For its part, China declared Hong Kong a “Special
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Administrative Region” and guaranteed its civil and social system for
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at least 50 years after 1997. Although China’s Basic Law promised that
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Hong Kong’s existing laws and civil liberties would be upheld, refugees
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began flowing the other way. The British Nationality Act (1981) had in
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effect prevented Hong Kong citizens from acquiring British citizenship,
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and thousands of people, anxious about their future under China’s rule,
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were prompted to apply for citizenship elsewhere, notably in Canada and
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Australia. The protests in 1989 in Beijing’s Tiananmen Square sparked
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sympathy marches in Hong Kong, and further increased tension with
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China. Some companies moved their headquarters out of Hong Kong.
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Ironically, as the handover approached, the British granted
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the Hong Kong Chinese more political autonomy than they had done since
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the colony was founded, including such democratic reforms as elections
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to the Legislative Council.
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Since the handover in July 1997, China has generally
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followed a hands-off policy. Many who fled have returned. What controls
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heartbeats in Hong Kong are the fluctuations of the Hang Seng Index,
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foreign currency exchange rates, and skyrocketing property prices. In
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short, the status quo prevails. Everybody hopes Hong Kong will remain
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stable, but everyone also has their doubts. In the meantime, the
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philosophy is to seize present-day opportunities in the thriving
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economy.
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