Abide By Joint Declaration, May Tells Beijing

"); jQuery("#212 h3").html("

Related News Programmes

"); });

2019-07-18 HKT 04:25

Share this story

facebook

  • Theresa May said there was a need to send a clear message to Beijing on Hong Kong. Photo: AP

    Theresa May said there was a need to send a clear message to Beijing on Hong Kong. Photo: AP

The outgoing British prime minister, Theresa May, has told Beijing that the Sino-British Joint Declaration, which paved the way for Hong Kong's 1997 handover, is still in force and must be respected.

Speaking at her last major public engagement, at the Chatham House think tank in London, May hailed Britain's growing trade links with China.

A diplomat from China's embassy in London questioned the prime minister about her advice to her successor on maintaining a relationship with Beijing, with particular reference to disputes over Hong Kong.

May said there were areas on which Britain needed to be "very clear" with Beijing and "the continuation of the Joint Declaration in relation to Hong Kong is one of those".

"That declaration continues to be in force," she said. "We would say to China that it needs to be abided by, it needs to be respected, and continue to be respected.

"So, in a sense it's like all relationships. We look to develop those economic ties, but we will also be very clear when we feel that there are messages we need to give, and I'm sure that will continue into the future."

Some Beijing officials have been dismissive of the Joint Declaration. Foreign Ministry spokesman Lu Kang described it in 2017 as a "historical document" that no longer had any realistic meaning.

May's governing Conservative Party is in the process of electing a replacement for her as leader. Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt, who has been highly critical of the Hong Kong government's attempts to change the extradition law, is one of two candidates along with the favourite, his predecessor Boris Johnson, a former London mayor.

RECENT NEWS

A16z Crypto Opens First Office In Seoul To Expand In Asia

a16z crypto, the crypto-focused arm of Andreessen Horowitz, has announced its expansion into Asia with the opening of i... Read more

Trio AI And AbbyPay Partner To Integrate AI Into Payment Processing

Trio AI, a Hong Kong-based AI infrastructure service provider, has signed a MouU with AbbyPay, a POS-free digital payme... Read more

Modernising Bank Payments: How Banks Can Win In Merchant Acquiring

Banks have been the backbone of merchant acquiring. Their regulatory strength, trusted brands, and long-standing mercha... Read more

KPay Enables Tap To Pay On IPhone For Hong Kong Merchants

KPay now allows its Hong Kong merchants to accept in-person contactless payments using Tap to Pay on iPhone. The featur... Read more

HashKey Group IPO Targets Up To HK1.67 Billion In Hong Kong Listing

Licensed crypto exchange HashKey Group is intending to raise as much as HK$1.67 billion in its Hong Kong initial public... Read more

Endowus Launches Income Enhanced Portfolio For Professional Investors

Endowus, an independent wealth advisor and investment platform in Asia, has launched its Income Enhanced Portfolio, ava... Read more