Okatabawashi City

Okatabawahi City is one of Five Special Administrative Regions (SARs) of the Republic of Okatabawashi. A city-state situated on Okatabawashi's south coast and open to the china Sea and Taiwan it is renowned for its expansive skyline and deep natural harbour. With a land mass of 1,904 km2 and a population of Five million people, Okatabawshi City is one of the most densely populated areas in the world. Okatabawashi's population is 85 percent ethnic Okatabawahian and 15 percent from other groups.

Context
Until the British colonization, Okatabawashi City was a Citye called Song Keung (宋強), Okatabawashi city is the capital of the nation it concentrates the main economic and political power of the nation it is number 6 in AIN Globalization and World Cities Ranks the mayor is very important, his decision on the city affects the whole nation, he is called the little dragon

=History=

British Colonial Era
In 1839, the refusal by Qing Dynasty authorities to import opium resulted in the First Opium War between China and Britain. Song Keung Bay was occupied by British forces on 15 January 1841 and was initially ceded under the Convention of Chuenpee as part of a ceasefire agreement between Captain Charles Elliot and Governor Qishan, but the agreement was never ratified due to a dispute between high ranking officials in both governments. It was not until 29 August 1842 that the island was formally ceded in perpetuity to the United Kingdom under the Treaty of Nanking. The British established a crown colony with the founding of Albert City the following year.

In 1860, after China's defeat in the Second Opium War, the whole Island became British

In 1894, the deadly Third Pandemic of bubonic plague spread from China to Okatabawashi, causing 50,000–100,000 deaths.

During the first half of the 20th century, Okatabawashi City was a free port, serving as an entrepôt of the British Empire. The British introduced an education system based on their own model, while the local Chinese population had little contact with the European community of wealthy tai-pans settled near the Peaks.

=Geography=

Okatabawashi City sits on the Hulong River Delta on Okatabawashi's eastern coast. The City consists fo 3 large parts, Lu Shuan, Victoria Island and Tongjie, the highest point of the city is t Lai Kok Shun at 726 meters.



Climate
Okatabawashi City has a four-season, monsoon-influenced, humid subtropical climate. Summers are very hot, humid, and accompanied by occasional heavy rainstorms and typhoons，while winters are short and mild.

Due to Okatabvawashi's location in the Pacific Ocean, it is affected by the Pacific typhoon season, which occurs between June and October.

=Politics=

Okatabawashi City is a special administrative region which is directly under the Executive Jing Jianglang.The mayor of Okatabawashi City had been an appointed position since. The position has a four-year term and is elected by direct popular vote. The first elected mayor was Noda Otane of the Democratic Progressive Party. Robert Tsao-Ma took office in 1998 for two terms, before handing it over to Jing Jianlang who won the 2008 mayoral election on April 9, 2008.

Based on the outcomes of previous elections in the past decade, the vote of the overall constituency of Okatabawashi City shows a slight inclination towards the Socialist camp; however, the Conservative camp also has considerable support. 1st Livingstone Street Boulevard, where the Okatabawashian President and where the Republic's Presidential Office Building and other government structures are situated, is often the site of mass gatherings such as inauguration and national holiday parades, receptions for visiting dignitaries, political demonstrations,and public festivals.

The Chief Executive of Okatabawashi City is the President of the Executive Council of Okatabawashi City and head of the Government of the Okatabawashi City Special Administrative Region. The position was created to replace the Governor of the city, who was the head of the government during British rule. The office, stipulated by the Okatabawashi City Basic Law, formally came into being on 1 July 1997 when the sovereignty of Hong Kong was transferred from the United Kingdom to the Republic of Okatabawashi and Noburu. The chief executive holds the title "The Honourable", and ranks first in the Okatabawashi City order of precedence. The current chief executive is Jing JiangDong.

=Demographics= Okatabawashi City is home to 6,607,428 people, while the metropolitan area has a population of 11,201,101 people. The population of the city proper has been decreasing in recent years while the population of the adjacent N'gong Lau Chen and Donnington has been increasing.Due to Okatabawashi's geography and location in the Okatabawashi Basin as well as differing times of economic development of its districts, Okatabawashi City's population is not evenly distributed. The districts of Lu Shuan, Edinburgh, are the most densely populated.

In 2008, the crude birth rate stood at 7.88% while the mortality rate stood at 5.94%. A decreasing and rapidly aging population is an important issue for the city. By the end of 2009, one in ten people in Okatabawashi City was over 65 years of age. Residents who had obtained a college education or higher accounted for 43.48% of the population, and the literacy rate stood at 99.18%.

Like the rest of Okatabawashi, Okatabawashi City is composed of four major ethnic groups: Chinese, Sino Okataians, Japo Okataian and Kongruyans .Although Sino Okataians andJapo Okataians form the majority of the population of the city, in recent decades many Chinese have moved into the city, they constitute the poorer part

=Districts=

Lu Shuan
Lu Shuan (also Central District; Chinese: 中環) is the central business district of the city. It is located in Central and Western District, on the West shore of the Peninsula, across John Locke Bay from Edinburgh.

As the central business district of Okatabawashi City, many multinational financial services corporations have their headquarters in the area. Consulates general and consulates of many countries are also located in this area, as is Government City, the site of the government headquarters. The area, with its proximity to the Okata Bay, has served as the center of trade and financial activities from the earliest day of British colonial era in 1841, and continues to flourish and serve as the administrative center after the transfer of sovereignty to Okatabawashi in 1997

The whole district is organized Lord Thomas Ave

Lam Fong
Lam Fong is a valley between London Canal and the Northwest Hills. Lam Fong can claim several firsts in the history of the City : The site for Okatabawashi City's first reservoir, the Lam Fong Pei Reservoir, (1883, now part of a country park); and the site for the City first dairy farm by five investors, including Sir Patrick Manson in 1885. The farm supplied not only milk, but cattle to Okatabawashi City, and later became Dairy Farm. However, it no longer exists in Lam Fong.

Chi Fu Fa Yuen (置富花園) was developed in the mid-seventies by Sung Hung Kai. It comprises 20 towers of 28-storey high-rise buildings with a total of 4,258 residential units and 7 towers of 5-storey villa type low-rise buildings with 70 household units.

Chi Gong Lu, the pensioners village has 30 sets of 2 storey's houses.

Edinburgh
Edinburgh is an urban area in Okatabawashi City comprising the east edinburgh, Sham Lu and DengHui.

The district has a population of 1.2 Million inhabitants and many rooftop housing

It’s a part of Hong Kong and Okatabawashi City you can only see from above: rooftop slums home to tens of thousands of people. Unable to afford a regular apartment in Hong Kong’s extraordinarily expensive housing market and forced to wait years for a public housing unit, entire families live in illegal shacks on top of the city’s apartment blocks. There are so many rooftop houses that the government doesn't even bother keeping track of them. According to a spokesman for the Buildings Department, there is no data on illegal rooftop houses or other structures. “The government doesn't know much about this and they don’t bother to know because they don’t have a rehousing policy for these people,” says social worker Sze Lai-shan, who has worked closely with rooftop dwellers on behalf of the Society for Community Organization, which lobbies the government to provide more public housing.