Hong Kong’s first Chinese leader after the end of British rule appealed to all sides in the democracy dispute to work together yesterday as the last colonial governor said China must stand by its promises.

Hong Kong, which returned to China in 1997, is bracing for a wave of protests after Beijing on Sunday ruled out fully democratic elections for the city’s leader in 2017, sparking a political showdown with democrats.

“Hong Kong is our home, we have to work together,” first Chief Executive Tung Chee-hwa, 77, handpicked by China, said in a speech.

“The only way out, and the only way forward, is through working together, hand in hand, otherwise there will be no end to bitter squabbles and the paralysis.”

A half-million strong anti-government rally forced former shipping magnate Tung to step down in 2005, nearly two years before completing his second five-year term. He had faced criticism over plans for an anti-subversion bill amid widespread calls for greater democracy.

Police on Monday used pepper spray to disperse activists who heckled and jeered a senior Chinese official who flew to Hong Kong to explain the decision by China’s National People’s Congress Standing Committee announced on Sunday. China said in the Basic Law mini-constitution for Hong Kong that universal suffrage was an eventual aim. On Sunday, it said it would permit a vote for Hong Kong’s next chief executive, but only for a handful of pre-screened candidates.

Chris Patten, the last British governor of Hong Kong who was in tears during the 1997 handover ceremony, said Britain had a moral and political obligation to ensure China respects its commitments.

“We have a huge stake in the wellbeing of Hong Kong, with a political system in balance with its economic freedom,” said Patten in a letter to the Financial Times.

His letter came a day after Britain’s Parliament said it had rejected Chinese calls to scrap an inquiry into Hong Kong’s progress towards democracy.

China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs criticised the British inquiry, saying that it represented interference in China’s internal politics.

“Today’s Hong Kong is not the Hong Kong of 1997,” the Chinese ministry spokesman, Qin Gang, said at a daily press briefing yesterday.

“The affairs of Hong Kong Special Administrative Region are China’s domestic affairs, and we oppose outside interference in those affairs in any form.”

Asked about a statement from the US Department of State in support of universal suffrage in Hong Kong, Qin said a stable Hong Kong benefits the international community including the United States.

“The Hong Kong issue is related to China’s sovereignty, security and development interests,” he said. “Safeguarding prosperity and stability in Hong Kong serves the shared interests of the international community.”

Communist Party leaders in Beijing fear calls for democracy spreading to other cities. Britain itself made no mention of democracy for Hong Kong until the dying days of more than 150 years of colonial rule.

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