Amid protest, Hong Kong moves closer to new government
November 15, 1996
Web posted at: 3:15 p.m. EST (2015 GMT)
HONG KONG (CNN) -- While demonstrators protested outside, a
committee hand-picked by the Chinese government narrowed the
field of candidates to head Hong Kong's provisional
government Friday.
China's foreign minister hailed the session as "the start of
real democracy," but critics called the replacement of Hong
Kong's freely elected legislature with a provisional
government a step backwards.
The winner of the race, to be decided by the committee in a
December 11 runoff, will lead Hong Kong when it reverts to
Beijing's control on July 1.
The establishment of the Hong Kong Special Administrative
Region, China's name for Hong Kong's future political status,
"is the start of real democracy in Hong Kong, and not the end
of democracy," Chinese Foreign Minister Qian Qichen said at
the opening of the inaugural session of the Special Selection
Committee.
The 400-member committee, made up of Hong Kong residents
chosen by the Chinese government, is charged with the task of
selecting the Hong Kong's future legislators and chief
executive.
Friday, it chose three candidates to stand in the December
runoff. The three are: shipping tycoon Tung Chee-hwa, former
Chief Justice Ti Liang Yang and businessman Peter Woo.
As the committee met, a small but vocal group of pro-
democracy demonstrators protested the process. One banner
called it "a great step backwards for democracy."
Some of the 40 protesters clashed with police and a few
rushed into the Hong Kong Convention Center where the
committee was meeting. Police chased them up six flights of
escalators before apprehending them.
Qian addressed criticism of the process in his opening
statement.
"If you do not believe the Chinese people in Hong Kong have
the ability to rule Hong Kong properly that is an attitude
left by old colonialism," he said. "Hong Kong people can do
Hong Kong properly you must have this confidence."
The final representative of colonial rule, Gov. Chris Patten,
previously expressed his opposition to the selection process.
Last month, in his final opening address to the legislature,
Patten said, "A 'provisional' ... legislature is bad enough.
The suggestion that it could operate in parallel with this
council makes a bad idea even worse."
British Foreign Secretary Malcolm Rifkind also registered his
discontent. "China would have to explain to Hong Kong and to
the world why they had chosen to replace a body for which
more than a million Hong Kong people voted by one chosen by a
hand-picked electorate of only 400," he said in London.
But there is little Patten or Rifkind can do to halt the
formation of the provisional legislature. By the end of the
year, the selection committee will have done its work and
Hong Kong's future leaders will have been chosen.
Correspondent May Lee and Reuters contributed to this report.
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