July 2, 2022
1 min read

Once Asia’s World City, Hong Kong is just another Chinese city now

Halfway into the 50-year grace period, Hong Kong is already unrecognisable to many.

Just 25 years after the handover, Hong Kong is no longer the world’s freest economy and has plummeted in global press freedom rankings following a citywide crackdown on dissent under the national security law, RFA reported.

On July 1, 1997, the British flag came down for the last time in Hong Kong, as the city returned to Chinese rule.

The ruling Chinese Communist Party (CCP) under Deng Xiaoping had promised it could run its own affairs under “one country, two systems,” with the city’s freedoms preserved for at least 50 years, and with progress promised towards fully democratic elections.

The reality has been rather different. “People who stayed are like the frog in a pan of gradually warming water,” economist Law Ka-chung told RFA.

“Maybe some of them think everything’s fine, but others see a huge difference.”

Today, not a single promise made by Chinese leaders before the handover has been kept. Halfway into the 50-year grace period, Hong Kong is already unrecognisable to many.

Hong Kong Stock Exchange

“Since the National Security Law came in, there’s a lot of things you can’t say any more; a lot of things you can’t write; even people you can’t interview,” former Stand News journalist Lam Yin-bong told RFA.

The last races under British rule took place in June 1997. More than H.K.$2.5 billion in bets were placed.

Under “one country, two systems”, China promised that “the horses will run as usual, and people can keep on partying”.

Now, people’s lives may appear similar on the surface, but what was once the world’s freest economy no longer gets its own separate trading status, RFA reported.

Once known as Asia’s World City, Hong Kong is seen as just another Chinese city now, RFA reported.

“Important stuff like politics, the economy, used to be very different from mainland China,” Law said. “The way we collected data, our stock market.”

“But it all changed gradually until there was no difference at all.”

ALSO READ: Britain not giving up on Hong Kong, says Boris Johnson  

Previous Story

Ukraine needs ‘hard work, determination’ to join EU: Von der Leyen

Next Story

Pakistan protests over India’s blocking of Twitter accounts

Latest from -Top News

Gaza truce deal hits new snag

US says Hamas’ reply to the ceasefire plan was “totally unacceptable” and accused the Palestinian group of dragging the negotiations backward. The latest attempt to broker a ceasefire in Gaza has hit

IAEA flags Iran enrichment spike

The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), in two separate but related reports, said Iran has boosted its uranium stockpile enriched up to 60% purity by nearly 50% since February. Iran has vehemently

Baloch Insurgents Storm Surab

The fighters took control of the Pakistani Levies (paramilitary force) station, police station, Deputy Commissioner (DC) office, guest house, and bank, and damaged “enemy” infrastructure….reports Asian Lite News The Baloch Liberation Army
Go toTop

Don't Miss

Blinken postpones China trip over spy balloon

Antony Blinken was scheduled to leave for China later on

Seagate hit with $300m penalty over HDD exports to Huawei

The penalty is the latest move by the US government