Rewritten Schoolbooks Say Hong Kong Was Never British Colony
- New materials will be used starting in September, SCMP reports
- City’s curriculum revamped as Beijing exerts greater control
The Hong Kong handover ceremony on July 1, 1997.Photographer: Kimimasa Mayama/AFP/Getty Images
By Krystal Chia (Bloomberg)
June 14, 2022, 11:00 AM GMT+7
New schoolbooks will teach students in Hong Kong that the city was never a British colony, the South China Morning Post reports, as Beijing seeks to tighten its control of the territory.
The four sets of textbooks for a class on citizenship say the Chinese government never recognized the 19th-century treaties that handed Britain control of Hong Kong, the report says. They also stick to the government’s stance on the large and sometimes violent protests in the city in 2019, blaming them on “external forces.”
The educational materials have been provided to schools so they can pick which to teach from September, the newspaper said. Textbook publishers are responsible for choosing the appropriate materials for schoolbooks in accordance with official guidelines, the Education Bureau said in a statement to Bloomberg News.
China’s ruling Communist Party refers to agreements signed by the Qing dynasty and later governments that made concessions to foreign governments such as land control as “unequal treaties.”
Beijing’s refusal to recognize the agreements informs its belief that Hong Kong matters are strictly domestic. In 2019, China’s then ambassador to the UK, Liu Xiaoming, accused London of “gross interference” for what he saw as support for protesters. Some in China also hold the view that admitting Hong Kong was ever a colony would open the door to its independence, a demand of some demonstrators.
Britain took Hong Kong Island during the First Opium War (1839-42) and later signed a treaty that gave it control over the adjoining New Territories for 99 years. That agreement ended on July 1, 1997, an anniversary that is marked every year in the city. This year’s event may be attended by Chinese President Xi Jinping, whose government has expanded control over Hong Kong through measures including a revamp of the electoral system.
Chief Executive Carrie Lam wouldn’t confirm whether her administration had created the right conditions for the Chinese leader’s visit on Tuesday at her final weekly press conference before leaving office later this month. “We, of course, would like to have a cheerful atmosphere to celebrate the reunification,” she said.
Beijing has blamed, in part, the city’s schools for fostering the dissent that fueled the 2019 protests against the Communist Party’s increasing influence.
Since that unrest, sweeping changes to the curriculum have seen children taught to memorize offenses criminalized by a Beijing-imposed security law, a National Security Education Day launched in schools and teachers advised to report on children who breach that legislation.