The 1967 Riots from the Perspective of Hong Kong’s Core Values
The 1967 riots (Anti-British Anti-Violence Struggle) (網絡圖片) In 2004, a group of Hong Kong democrats published the Hong Kong Core Values Declaration, proclaiming these to be ‘liberty, democracy, human rights, rule of law, fairness, social justice, peace and compassion, integrity and transparency, plurality, respect for individuals, and upholding professionalism’. Although not widely recognised at the time, the idea of core values has gradually been permeating people’s consciousness since then. Those of the post-80s generation are likely to agree with the author, having grown used to clean effective government, public housing, comprehensive healthcare and nine-year compulsory education. However, none of these were inevitable. The 1967 riots—or what its participants referred to as the ‘Anti-British Anti-Violence Struggle’—spanning from May to December 1967, were initiated by Hong Kong’s Leftist (pro-Beijing) forces, beginning with peaceful demonstrations evolving into violent insur...