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Tiananmen Square Repeat Likely In Hong Kong?
Could the Chinese Government allow any protesters to 'win'? If they got away with it in HK why not elsewhere?
http:// www.bbc .co.uk/ news/wo rld-asi a-china -294055 76
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The Chinese government is extremely paranoid about public unrest, and has been for 20+ years. Their response to protest has always been unfettered brutality, and I can't see that changing. It's possible that a few months after this is done, they might make some policy changes on the quiet. But HK already has substantially 'devolved' powers, so I doubt they will go any further than they already have.
I lived in Hong Kong for 5 years. Went out just after Margaret Thatcher had signed the Joint Declaration. There was a lot of nervousness over the next few years with the richer Chinese definitely planning to leave. I worked at a Chinese Shool teaching Englsh when Tiananman Square happened and when I went into work the net day everyone was crying. They were terrified that tanks would be rolling down the Tollo Highway in July 1997. I saw the British trying to put in place some form of democracy as the colony had been run by an apponted Governor until then and they produced a Basic Law document. I may say the British Rule ha been fair and just and the Chinese seemed to be happy with the status quo. The Chinese had promised to keep things as they were for 50 years. Hong Kong has always been a 'Laissez-faire' sort of place and the Chinese realised it would be foolish to kill the goose that laid the golden egg. Surprisingly the transfer seemed to go quite smoothly. I still have friends there and have been back and none of their fears have materialised, until now. I really dont know how this will end as the Chinese Cmmunists Party do not like backing down.
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