Donald Tsang, chief executive of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region
(HKSAR), said Hong Kong has experienced a lot in the past 10 years and these
experiences have proved the principle of "one country, two systems" a
unprecedented success.
"Hong Kong is now stronger, maturer, and knowing more about its own future,"
said Tsang in Cantonese-accent Mandarin when interviewed by Xinhua.
Wearing his trademark bowtie, Tsang said he began to learn Mandarin when he
was 45 years old. Though not perfectly fluent, he tried to use Mandarin every
time when interviewed by reporters from the Chinese mainland.
Tsang said that Hong Kong experienced a series of difficulties in the past 10
years, including the Asian financial crisis, bird flu and SARS.
"Every event has caused some economically or socially changes in Hong Kong,
but we have survived all these difficulties," said Tsang, adding that with the
ups and downs, Hong Kong has enhanced its capability in dealing with
emergencies.
After the Asian financial crisis, Hong Kong's financial market has become
more resistible to international speculators' attacks, and after the SARS, Hong
Kong has upgraded its sanitary system and now it is more capable of dealing with
urgent sanitary crisis, said Tsang.
"In Hong Kong, we could always learn about something in everything," said
Tsang, " the tradition will keep on. It's the basic Hong Kong spirit that we
'never give up'"
Tsang, serving the Hong Kong government on different positions, witnessed
every change of Hong Kong in the past 10 years. In June 2005, Tsang was first
elected as the chief executive of the HKSAR when his predecessor Tung Chee Hwa
resigned mid-way through his second term due to ill health.
On March 25, 2007, Tsang won a landslide election for the third term chief
executive of HKSAR. He will begin serving his new term on July 1, 2007, which
will end on June 30, 2012.
He said that in the past 10 years, the central government always stood by
Hong Kong's side and gave an all-out support to Hong Kong whenever it needed. In
the meantime, Hong Kong's identity was getting clearer day by day and Hong Kong
residents are heartily proud of the rapid development of the motherland.
"In the past 10 years, Hong Kong's life style, core value, freedom, a fair
society, everything Hong Kong citizen valued most, is not weakened but getting
stronger," he said.
He added that while keeping its own core value, Hong Kong is contributing to
the motherland in a lot of fields, for example, in the financial development.
"Currently speaking, 'one country' and 'two systems' have both been put into
effect in Hong Kong and proved a success," he said.
As for the linkage with the motherland, Tsang said that in China's 11th
five-year plan, which outlines the development of the whole country from 2006 to
2010, the central government has set an accurate orientation for Hong Kong as
keeping its financial, trade and shipping center.
"The rapid development of the whole country has given a great opportunity to
Hong Kong," said Tsang. "It shows the support and expectation of the central
government to Hong Kong."
Tsang admitted that there will be competition between Hong Kong and the
Chinese mainland in some fields, but he added that Hong Kong as an international
financial center, 90 percent of its economic power comes from service industry.
Hong Kong's development orientation will be different from that of the Chinese
mainland and it will always adjust itself according to the need of the market
and the development of the mainland.
"Everything I do, I bear the thought on how to get a 'win-win' result for
both the Chinese mainland and Hong Kong," said Tsang.
As Hong Kong's third term CE, Tsang has a detailed plan for the city's
development in the next five years. He said that he will try to go out more to
contact Hong Kong residents and let them fully join in the work of the HKSAR
government.
"I have the confidence to bring Hong Kong's development to a new height in
the next five years," said Tsang.