History
The British took over control of Hong Kong in 1841 following the Opium Wars. European trade with China had been taking place since the 16th century, but as European demand for tea and silk grew, the balance of trade became more and more unfavourable to Europeans, who were expected to pay in silver. In 1773, the British unloaded 70,000 kg opium, and the Chinese taste for the 'foreign mud' exponentially. Alarmed at the drain of silver from the country and the increasing number of addicts, the emperor banned the drug trade. The emperor did not like the European. He called them guailo, which means foreign devil, and attempted to keep the European seperate from the Chinese. The Europeans, with the help of corrupt Chinese officials, managed to keep the trade in opium going until 1839, when the emperor again issued orders to stamp it out.

The British sent an expeditionary force to China to exact reprisals, secure favourable trade arrangements and obtain use of some islands as a British base. The force blockaded Canton (now called Guangzhou) and a number of other ports, ultimately threatening Beijing. The British pressured the Chinese into ceding Hong Kong Island to them in perpetuity. Both sides ultimately repudiated the agreement, but Commodore Gordon Bremmer led a contingent of naval men ashore on 26 January 1841 and claimed the island for Britain. A series of conflicts followed, with the British and French force invaded China in 1859, forcing the Chinese to agree to the Convention of Peking, which ceded the Kowloon Peninsula and nearly Stonecutters Island to the British. In 1898, the British also gained a 99-year lease on the New Territories, which they felt essential to protect their interests on Hong Kong Island.

Prior to WW II, Hong Kong began a gradual shift away from trade to manufacturing. This move was hastened by the civil war in China during the 1920s and by the Japanese invasion in the 1930s, when Chinese capitalists fled to the safer confines of the colony. When the Us embargo on Chinese goods during the Korean War threatened to strangle the colony, it was forced to increase its manufacturing capacity and develop service industries, such as banking and insurance. Hong Kong's existence was threatened again when the Communists came to power in China in 1949 and during the Cultural Revolution in the 1960s. Although the Chinese could have re-taken Hong Kong with ease, China was as reliant on Hong Kong as Hong Kong was on China.

In December 1984 the British agreed to hand over the entire colony when the lease on the New Territories ran out in 1997, rather than hang onto a truncated colony consisting of Kowloon and Hong Kong island. The agreement theoretically allows Hong Kong to retain it presents social, economic and legal systems for at least 50 years after 1997. As the handover approached, controversies raged over the building of Hong Kong's expensive new airport and the amount of democracy the Chinese were willing to accept. Little has changed on the surface since the handover, though voters clearly signalled their desires in legislative elections in May 1998, when a significant number of pro-democracy candidates were elected to office. Hong Kong is currently suffering te fallout from Asia's economic crises, and is experiencing rising unemployment and close to zero growth.

 
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