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The handover ceremony of Hong Kong in 1997 officially marked the transfer of the sovereignty of Hong Kong from the British back to the Chinese. It was held on the night of June 30, 1997 at the new Hong Kong Convention and Exhibition Centre (HKCEC) in Wan Chai.

The ceremony


The principal British guest was The Prince of Wales who read a farewell speech on behalf of Queen Elizabeth II. Also representing Britain were Tony Blair (newly elected Prime Minister of the United Kingdom), Chris Patten (last Governor of Hong Kong), Robin Cook (Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs), and Charles Guthrie (then-Chief of the General Staff).

Representing the People's Republic of China were Jiang Zemin (then-Chairman of the People's Republic of China), Tung Chee-hwa (first Chief Executive of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region), Li Peng (then-Premier of the People's Republic of China), Qian Qichen (then-Vice Premier of the People's Republic of China), and Zhang Wannian (then Vice-Chairman of the Central Military Commission).

As midnight approached, the Union Jack was slowly lowered to the British anthem God Save the Queen, symbolizing the end of British colonial rule in Hong Kong. At promptly midnight, 1 July 1997, the flag of the People's Republic of China is flown to the Chinese anthem March of the Volunteers. Prince Charles and Jiang Zemin each gave a speech before and after the switch.

After the handover ceremony, there was a swear-in ceremony in the HKCEC for various Hong Kong SAR officials including Tung Chee-hwa, Anson Chan, Donald Tsang, Elsie Leung, and others. The British representatives did not attend the swear-in ceremony. Prince Charles and Chris Patten, with his family, bid the citizens of Hong Kong farewell in the Tamar site and boarded the HM Yacht Britannia on its last voyage back to Britain. The boat was escorted by HMS Chatham (F87). Tony Blair and other British officials, on the other hand, went back to Britain by plane.

Reactions


In 2005, the British Mail on Sunday revealed Prince Charles's diary entries, where he referred to the transfer as the "Great Chinese Takeaway", and the Chinese officials as "appalling old waxworks". In another reported extract, Prince Charles described the ceremony as an "awful Soviet-style" performance and dismissed the speech by Jiang Zemin as "propaganda", complete with loud cheering "by the bussed-in party faithful at the suitable moment in the text." He also says the People's Liberation Army marches in "goosesteps" in the ceremony and claims his trip on the HMY Britannia out of Hong Kong was closely watched by Chinese warships.

Reference


External link


History of Hong Kong | 1997 | British rule in Hong Kong

 

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