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Then & Now | The trees and plants in Hong Kong left over from post-war squatter settlements, when 1.5 million fled China’s civil war and Communist takeover

  • In the years following the end of the second Sino-Japanese war, 1.5 million people fled China for poor, overcrowded Hong Kong and formed squatter settlements
  • Traces of settlements not built over for public housing can still be seen – not least ornamental plants and fruit trees left behind when the settlers moved out

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Squatter huts alongside Mount Parker Road in Quarry Bay in 1977. A legacy of such squatter areas in Hong Kong that were cleared but not concreted over for public housing is the trees and plants settlers left behind when they were moved out. Photo: SCMP

Between 1946 and 1952 – the Chinese civil war having resumed with full ferocity after the temporary pause that the Sino-Japanese war had allowed – more than a million and a half people decamped to Hong Kong, just before China’s emergent surveillance-police state became efficient enough to restrict internal movement.

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These mainland Chinese voluntarily chose to make their homes and lives under the supposed oppressions and miseries found in a desperately overcrowded, resource-poor British colony. In direct consequence of this sudden population influx, sprawling squatter settlements became a fact of Hong Kong life, and remained so for more than 40 years.

What happened to these areas – from when the first large-scale squatter resettlement efforts were undertaken in the early 1950s to the construction of public housing developments such as Oi Man at Ho Man Tin in the 1960s and 70s, with integrated public transport, wet markets, medical clinics and schools – are well-documented aspects of local life.

From scholarly monographs on squatter resettlement and public-housing policies to popularly oriented, well-illustrated local histories, along with oral histories and memoirs in both Chinese and English, Hong Kong’s socio-economic evolution in the post-war era can be seen through these distinctive areas.

Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II waves to residents of Oi Man Estate in Ho Man Tin, built to rehouse occupants of squatter settlements. Behind the Queen are Governor Sir Murray MacLehose. Photo: SCMP
Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II waves to residents of Oi Man Estate in Ho Man Tin, built to rehouse occupants of squatter settlements. Behind the Queen are Governor Sir Murray MacLehose. Photo: SCMP

Some fragmentary evidence of earlier times remains in areas where now-demolished squatter settlements were not subsequently redeveloped into public housing estates.

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Hidden among long grass and undergrowth, concrete floor slabs – left behind when the rest of the structure was torn down – tell their own silent stories.

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