-Abstract-

Chinese Refugees in Hong Kong and US Cold War Propaganda

Speaker: Chi-Kwan Mark, Royal Holloway College, University of London



After 1945, refugee migration and international politics were inextricably linked. The founding of the Peoplefs Republic of China in 1949 propelled hundreds of thousands of Chinese to flee from their homeland to the British colony of Hong Kong. This massive refugee movement was to have significant international ramifications. To decision-makers in Washington, the Chinese refugees in Hong Kong were an important instrument in the Cold War struggle: they were a symbol of anti-communism, a source of intelligence, and experts in the production of Chinese-language propaganda material. The United States administration thus provided financial support for the relief and resettlement of Chinese refugees in order to demonstrate the American concern and sympathy on the one hand, while finding opportunities to exploit the contrasting ways of life between communism and capitalism on the other. Nevertheless, Washington saw the Hong Kong refugee problem primarily as a British responsibility. As a result, American assistance had to be selective and confined to a small group of Chinese intellectuals and leaders who could contribute to the Cold War cause. This is not to say that American refugee policy was all about politics and propaganda, or that humanitarianism and realpolitik were mutually exclusive. But to American decision-makers (if not American voluntary welfare agencies), humanitarian concern was always subordinate to political, economic and ideological considerations. The Hong Kong case thus shows that a number of factors ? political, economic, ideological, racial, and humanitarian ? were at work that helped shape the American attitude and policy towards the refugee problem, both during the Cold War period and in the contemporary age. It also explains why the United States, either unilaterally or collectively, intervened in some refugee crises, but not in others.