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How does Britain bully Hong Kong women?

There are no reports of British bullying Hong Kong women, at least not watching TV programs. .

According to the documentary of Hong Kong history I have seen, at most, Hong Kong has just been cut by Britain. I know that in the1920s, Britain implemented two legal systems for Hongkong, foreigners used foreign laws and China people used Qing statutes. This period of time has been condemned by some historians as bullying China people. However, according to some official documents, most of the China people who immigrated to Hong Kong were gangsters at first, but now they are gangsters. The British legal system, such as imprisonment and the death penalty for ringleaders, has no deterrent effect on them. The crime rate in Hong Kong was once very high. Many people just took over Hong Kong from the Qing Dynasty, and their educational level was not high. Therefore, in this case, the colonial authorities announced the Qing Dynasty rule over the people of China. .

Later, until 1920s, I remember that a humanitarian governor came, and from then on, he announced the abolition of the penalty system in the Qing Dynasty and changed it back to the system of equal treatment, but kept the death penalty.

The death penalty was not abolished in Hong Kong until the 1970s.

At the beginning, the status of Chinese in Hong Kong was very low. At most, some village chiefs acted as villagers' representatives to advise the colonial authorities. Later, it seems that something similar to parliament was set up at the request of the king (not specifically called an order, but I don't know how to say it in Mandarin), with the governor as the speaker and members appointed. There is also something called the Executive Council, which is equivalent to the Cabinet.

Later, with the rise of the status of Chinese, Chinese members appeared in the Legislative Council (it seems that there were color newsreels in the 1960s, so it should be the 1960s). Later, more women joined the administrative committee. I remember a woman named Deng Lianru who was knighted in England. . . In fact, the monarch of Britain was later Elizabeth II, the Queen of England today. Even the monarch is a woman, and the status of women in Hong Kong is far from low. It seems that Hong Kong heavyweights, such as Rita Fan, held public office at the top of the British Hong Kong government and later became the first president of the Legislative Council of the SAR. For example, Tan, the chairman of the colonial transportation commission, is now a deputy to the National People's Congress in Hong Kong, and the first Department of Justice who returned in those years. The specific name has been forgotten. .

Practically speaking, the status of women in Hong Kong before the reunification was not low. . . Even the Chief Secretary for Administration, Anson Chan, is a woman. Before and after the reunification, many women held important positions in Hong Kong. .