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- THE WEEK, Page 22WORLDWhat Deal?
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- London and Beijing bicker over how democratic Hong Kong should
- be
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- Hong Kong's Governor, Chris Patten, has learned that he does
- not have to go to China to be snubbed. A week after his chilly
- sojourn in Beijing, Patten was stood up by a retired Chinese
- official who abruptly bowed out of a long-standing luncheon
- appointment at Government House. Meanwhile, pro-Beijing
- newspapers in the colony kept up their fusillade of ad hominem
- attacks on Patten, joined even by moderate members of Hong
- Kong's skittish business community.
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- The latest spat concerns Beijing's insistence that
- Patten's proposals to give Hong Kong people a greater voice in
- choosing their legislators contravene "secret" agreements with
- Britain on Hong Kong's political shape both before and after
- 1997. Patten retaliated by releasing the diplomatic traffic that
- China claimed proved its point. A letter from Foreign Secretary
- Douglas Hurd did refer to an "agreement in principle" about
- electoral arrangements. But it also mentioned a number of
- "details" that had to be worked out. Because those negotiations
- failed, Britain says there was no such deal. Agreed the Hong
- Kong Standard in a front-page editorial: "There are very few
- people who would argue that [there was a deal], and most of
- them are in Beijing." Unfortunately for Hong Kong, Mao's
- successors believe firmly in minority rule.
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