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      • All parties, including China, recognised that imposing China’s political system on the two colonies would create panic and cause economic mayhem. “One country, two systems” would allow the territories to remain much as they were, with independent legal systems and police forces.
      www.economist.com/the-economist-explains/2019/06/30/what-is-chinas-one-country-two-systems-policy
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    • What Has Been The International Response to Beijing’s Actions?
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    Although colonial Hong Kong had certain freedoms, it was never rated a full democracy[PDF] by international standards. And today, China is a one-party state that is reluctant to allow Hong Kong to hold free and fair elections. Experts note the ambiguity on this issue. The Basic Law states that the government’s “ultimate aim” is to have Hong Kong’s ...

    Beijing had been chipping away at Hong Kong’s freedoms since the handover, experts say. Over the years, its attempts to impose more control over the city have sparked mass protests, which have in turn led the Chinese government to crack down further. For instance, in 2003, the Hong Kong government proposed national security legislation that would h...

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  3. Although "one country, two systems" guarantees that Hong Kong's economic and political systems would not be changed for 50 years after the British handover in 1997, the Mainland Affairs Council of the Republic of China has cited 218 cases between 1997 and

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  5. 2019年6月30日 · All parties, including China, recognised that imposing China’s political system on the two colonies would create panic and cause economic mayhem. “One country, two systems” would...

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