David Tang

Thatcher, me and Hong Kong

Ten years on, Britain has received scant thanks for its role

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It’s not enough, if you wanted a rare interview with Lady T, just to cosy up to her. This would only, in the parlance of formal logic, be a necessary but not sufficient condition. So first I took her out to lunch — at Scott’s. As we entered the restaurant, I observed to Lady T: ‘I am sorry there are so many men!’

‘But you seem to forget that I spent a lot of time in Parliament,’ she retorted, quick as a flash.

It was a jolly lunch. Lady T had a wonderful appetite and finished all three of her courses and a large coffee. We talked about a lot of things, including The Spectator. When we got up to leave, every table applauded spontaneously. It was an affectionate gesture that filled the room and the great lady with considerable warmth.

But after the cosy lunch, I still had to convince her office about my requested interview. I had written what I regarded as persuasive a request as I could. Lady T had not given an interview for over five years. Thankfully, an old friend put in an extra good word and providence proved kind, and confirmation of my interview (for a recently aired Radio 4 programme) came through. I was very chuffed that the sufficient condition obtained.

Essentially, I wanted to find out if Lady T had any regret over handing Hong Kong back. I remember a lunch I gave her at my house in Hong Kong just before the hand-over. Jacob Rees-Mogg, the precocious son of William, was a guest. He questioned Lady T about having to surrender Hong Kong. Lady T was particularly sensitive about any innuendos of a ‘sell-out’, and slapped Jacob down with a belligerent reply. Ten years on, at Chester Square in Lady T’s home, the ex-prime minister was a little less belligerent. She confessed that she tried everything, and when Deng Xiaoping made it clear to her that the handover was inevitable, she had to concede and get on with the business of a smooth and honourable handover. And so all the grey men were sent in as packers.

It should be remembered, however, that it was not all plain sailing after Lady T signed the Joint Declaration in 1983. The Tiananmen incident on 4 June in 1989 was a thunderbolt. A million Hong Kong people went on demonstrations in the streets, and even the tycoons began to feel the jitters of what Hong Kong might become once subsumed under Chinese sovereignty. During that summer of discontent in 1989, a lot of people started to exfoliate their skin-deep sense of optimism. The Hong Kong dollar went into freefall, and a heavy depression set in. It was all serious stuff. The governor, David Wilson, decided to push for the building of a new airport, designed by Norman Foster, to bring about some seminal stimulations to the economy.

But just as Hong Kong felt the new airport would underpin confidence, China deliberately stalled the project. The Chinese were obviously upset with all the sympathy shown in Hong Kong over the Tiananmen incident, and the overt way in which the Brits felt they had to rescue the ebb of stability, which made the Chinese lose face. I decided to try an idea on John Major who had succeeded Lady T.

Our meeting, quickly arranged by Algy Cluff, took place at Admiralty House and not No. 10, as its Cabinet room was being repaired from the IRA mortar bomb. John Major produced Percy Cradock who had been Lady T’s principal advisor on China. I put it to them that the only option to persuade the Chinese to sanction the go-ahead on the airport was for Major, as prime minister, to agree it face-to-face with Li Peng, the Chinese premier who was the tough nut behind Tiananmen.

Major did not like the idea lest Li Peng still said ‘no’. But he was prepared to send Cradock on a ‘secret recce’ to find out if Li Peng would receive Major and promise the airport. Through a close Chinese friend of mine, a meeting between Cradock and Li Peng was duly arranged. I recall telephoning Cradock on a Sunday morning to see if he would make the meeting.

‘It depends on the SAS,’ the bespectacled diplomat muttered.

‘Why the SAS?’ I asked, rather surprised.

‘I would have to travel to Peking via Copenhagen.’

‘I see! You mean the Scandinavian airline, not the Special Air Service!’

‘Yes, I mean my incognito flight into Peking from Copenhagen.’

‘And where would you stay?’

‘The embassy, I suppose.’

‘But nobody else is supposed to know about your secret mission! And your visa?’

‘You will have to arrange that quietly with the Chinese ambassador in London. And our ambassador in Peking will have to be told. I am going to stay with him.’

So much for the secrecy of this great British mission, especially when not even the foreign secretary was supposed to know!

Cradock did get the assurance from Li Peng, and John Major became the first Western leader to shake hands with Li Peng after the Tiananmen incident. Major had always disliked that dubious accolade. But I admire him for it because he did it for Hong Kong. The laughable paradox, however, was that the airport was not completed before 1997 because Patten upset the Chinese.

Understanding all this makes us realise that, although from a British point of view everything and more was done to secure an honourable handover (and nobody would disagree that it was entirely honourable), the Chinese were, by 1997, quite fed up with the Pickford boys for having been packing for 14 years since the Joint Declaration. So on the stroke of midnight on 30 June 1997 the Brits became totally irrelevant — thankfully got rid of as far as the mainlanders were concerned, and pointlessly powerless as far as the locals were concerned.

Ergo, asking the question today of how Hong Kong has fared since 1997 is, in the British context, rather jejune. The British legacy has been irrelevant in the last ten years, and it will be irrelevant for the next ten years and ten years after that. Hong Kong has continued to flourish after 1997 without a modicum of British involvement. Lady T need not be sad at all. Major’s brave handshake with Li Peng has long been forgotten, and Patten’s political agenda only blamed whenever raised. None of the Brits, or anyone that matters, has been invited to any of the tenth anniversary celebrations in Hong Kong.

Great Britain has had no thanks for what it did, even if it was an honourable lot. Little Britain is what remains in Hong Kong from the once mighty empire. I felt this acutely as I chaired, as president, the AGM of the Hong Kong Royal Commonwealth Society last Monday — in front of just nine veteran members, with a plate of spring rolls and two pots of tea on the side. The presence of the Vicar of Dibley might not have been out of place. As for the place of the Brits in Hong Kong? ‘Ichabod’ sums it all up!