Negotiator of Hong Kong's handover to China, Geoffrey Howe dies at 88
Former British foreign secretary Geoffrey Howe, who came to Hong Kong in 1984 to announce the city’s return to China, has died of a suspected heart attack. He was 88.
The Conservative Party politician is widely recognised for his key role in paving the way for the 1984 agreement on the Sino-British Joint Declaration.
Howe, who was one of the late British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher’s key cabinet colleagues, became foreign secretary in 1983, in the year the first round of formal talks between Britain and China over Hong Kong began in Beijing.
David Cameron, the British prime minister, led tributes to Howe, saying: “Geoffrey Howe was a kind, gentle and deeply thoughtful man… He was the quiet hero of the first Thatcher government.
“The Conservative family has lost one of its greats.”
Howe is remembered in Hong Kong as the British foreign secretary of the time who negotiated with China over the city’s fate beyond 1997.
After a round of historic negotiations concluded in Beijing in 1984, Howe came to Hong Kong and gave a press conference on 20th April to officially announce that London would give up its rule in Hong Kong in 1997.