Britain had no obligation to hand over all of Hong Kong to China in 1997. Britain would have been well within her rights to keep a large part of it, and could still have had it now. For some reason, though, we just meekly gave the whole of the territory to China for no good reason. And it was then that the British Empire formerly came to an end.
North American Indians did not fare too well under the oppressive rule of Britain.
They were so "oppressed" by the British that huge numbers of them fought on the side of the British AGAINST the Americans in the War of Independence.
They didn't fare too well under American and Canadian oppression, is what I think you meant to say. Just think of all the Indians butchered by the Americans and Canadians, at places such as Wounded Knee, since independence. Funnily enough, thoush, massacres like Wounded Knee are rarely mentioned by North Americans concentrating, appropriately for them, on supposed injustices against the Indians created under British rule.
Is Rwanda massacre right? The whole western are watching as a political right stand? Why western didnot stop this?
Despite Rwanda gaining its independence from Belgium in 1962 and therefore becoming a member of the Francophonie in 1970, the Rwandans are, needless to say, not on very friendly terms with the French, who supported the massacre of hundreds of thousands of Tutsis by the Hutu in the 1995 Rwandan Genocide. So, in 2009, Rwanda joined the Commonwealth and its citizens have even taken up cricket. Like Afghanistan, Rwanda has recently taken a liking to cricket. Thousands of Rwandans have discovered the joins of that wonderful sport. The Rwanda cricket team became an affiliate member of the International Cricket Council in 2003. Their international debut came in the African Affiliates Championship in 2004, where they finished seventh. Twenty years from now Rwanda, and maybe Afghanistan, may be a major force in world cricket. So, despite being a former Belgian colony, the Rwandans have now made their country look like a former British colony.