chinadaily.com.cn
Home
News
Celebration
HK Today
HK in Retrospect
Video
Photo
Search
HK 10 Years > HK in Retrospect

Key moments in post-handover Hong Kong
(Reuters)

Hong Kong marks ten years since its return to Chinese sovereignty on July 1, 2007. Here are some key moments since the handover.

-- July 1, 1997: Beijing Chief Executive, Tung Chee-hwa, and Provisional Legislative Council sworn in as Hong Kong returns to Chinese sovereignty after 156 years of British rule.

-- Dec 1997-Jan 1998: "Bird flu" hits. All 1.4 million poultry in Hong Kong are killed, and the virus kills six people.

-- May 24, 1998: First multi-party vote. The democratic party sweeps elections for the new 60-member Legislative Council; taking 13 seats, versus the DAB party's 10 seats.

-- Oct. 6, 1998: Restrictions on mainland residents visiting relatives in Hong Kong are relaxed.

-- May 18, 1999: Legislative Council of Hong Kong ("LegCo") votes to seek Beijing's help in restricting the influx of mainland immigrants to no more than 200,000.

-- June 26: China's parliament overturns Hong Kong's highest court on right-of-abode provisions in the Basic Law.

-- Sept 11, 2000: Second legislative elections: Democratic Party returns as single largest group, but with strength eroded.

-- Jan. 12, 2001: Ex-civil service head Anson Chan resigns as Chief Secretary a year early. Donald Tsang appointed on Feb. 15.

-- Feb. 19, 2002: Chief Executive Tung's five-year term ends. Standing unopposed, Tung secures a second five-year term.

-- June 24: Tung names 14 "cabinet ministers" to run the 180,000-strong civil service, and appoints five advisers.

-- Sept. 24: Tung announces anti-subversion law called Article 23.

-- March-April, 2003: Flu-like SARS virus hits. Some 299 people die before Hong Kong is declared SARS-free in June 2003.

-- July 1: Many people march against Article 23. Two ministers later resign and the bill is indefinitely shelved.

-- April 2, 2004: Two days after Beijing rules it can veto any changes to Hong Kong election laws, Premier Wen Jiabao pledges the territory will ultimately have direct elections.

-- Sept. 12: Legislative council election draws a record 55 percent turnout, with half the 60 seats directly elected.

-- March 11, 2005: Tung Chee-hwa resigns after weeks of speculation, citing ill health. Donald Tsang takes over in June.

-- Sept. 12: Hong Kong Disneyland opens, the first in China.

-- Jan. 16, 2007: New rules restrict numbers of pregnant women coming from the mainland to Hong Kong to give birth.

-- March 25: Chief Executive Donald Tsang wins a new five-year term, defeating lawmaker Alan Leong in Hong Kong's first contested leadership election.

Theme Song of the 10th Anniversary of HKSAR
Hong Kong Handover - Flag ceremony
British Retreat
Hong Kong Handover - Prince Charles' Speech
Hong Kong Handover - Jiang Zemin's speech
Hong Kong Handover - honor guards and leaders
More Video
     

Copyright 1995-2007. All rights reserved.
The content (including but not limited to text, photo, multimedia information, etc) published in this site belongs to China Daily Information Co (CDIC).
Without written authorization from CDIC, such content shall not be republished or used in any form.