 Mr Patten effigy was burned in Sri Lanka |
EU Commissioner Chris Patten is no stranger to controversy. During his time as Hong Kong's governor he announced a programme of democratic reforms ahead of the Colony's handover to China that caused outrage in Beijing.
Now his effigy has been burnt because of his decision to meet with the Tamil Tiger leader, Velupillai Prabhakaran, in Sri Lanka.
Protesters outside Mr Patten's hotel said he should abandon the meeting.
Mr Patten once described his time as the former colony's last governor as the experience that shaped him for the rest of his life.
He was picked for the job in 1992 by the then UK Prime Minister, John Major, to oversee the return of the colony to China in 1997.
Soon after arriving in the then British colony he quickly ruffled Chinese feathers when he announced proposals for the democratic reform of Hong Kong's institutions a few months into his tenure.
War of words
Beijing was outraged that it had not been consulted and threatened to tear up business contracts and overturn the reforms when it took control of the colony.
The crisis in relations caused the Hong Kong stock market to crash in December 1992.
Reforms were eventually introduced 18 months later after numerous rounds of negotiations.
And his tough stand won him many admirers outside Beijing.
But relations between Mr Patten and the Chinese authorities remained strained. Chinese officials and media came up with a variety of insults including, most infamously, "fatty pang".
Nevertheless, the hand-over of Hong Kong to China in June 1997 was largely seen as a great success, and few will forget the sight of Mr Patten crying as the Union flag was taken down.
Fast-track
Chris Patten entered politics early. He joined the UK's Conservative Party research office after graduating from Oxford University.
He was elected MP for Bath in 1979, and spent most of the 1980s serving in Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher's governments.
Mr Patten was appointed parliamentary under-secretary for Northern Ireland in 1983, before moving to the Department of Education. He then became the overseas development minister before gaining a cabinet seat in 1989 as environment secretary. He was appointed chairman of the Conservative Party in 1990.
Mr Patten is credited with securing the Conservatives' election victory in the 1992 general election but lost his own Bath seat.
As a reward for his role on the election, Mr Major offered him the Hong Kong governorship.
On his return to the UK, he was appointed by the new Labour Prime Minister Tony Blair to head the independent commission on policing in Northern Ireland.
The report recommended a radical overhaul of the service, and came under considerable fire from Ulster Unionists who objected to proposals for a name change, a new badge, a new oath of allegiance and a new flag.
EU role
Since September 1999 Mr Patten has served as a member of the European Commission, responsible for foreign affairs and external relations. He aroused controversy last year when it was suggested in the press that he found the job boring.
He has long been critical of what he considers the endemic waste and fraud of the European Union's foreign aid programmes and the slowness of Brussels bureaucracy.
As commissioner for external relations he has been closely involved in recent attempts to define and refine what he calls "a common foreign and security policy", as well as working alongside Nato.