THE KWANGTUNG EXODUS OF 1962 ONE OF A SERIES OF STUDIES ON DISSIDENCE AND CONTROL IN COMMUNIST CHINA

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CIA-RDP79T00472A000300020001-6
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S
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24
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December 15, 2016
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September 10, 2003
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1
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Publication Date: 
February 23, 1965
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IS
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/) ApprQued For Release 2003/09/26 : CIA-RDP39T00472A000300020001-6 SECRET 23 February 1965 OCI No. 0343/65 Copy No. N2 INTELLIGENCE STUDY THE KWANGTUNG EXODUS OF 1962 One of a Series of Studies on Dissidence And Control in Communist China DIRECTORATE OF INTELLIGENCE Office of Current Intelligence 110 GROUP 1 EMI~oded from ooromorc Approved For Release 2003/09/26:6 00472A00030002 s Approd For Release 2003/09/26 : CIA-RDP700472A000300020001-6 WARNING This material contains information affecting the National Defense of the United States within the meaning of the espionage laws, Title 18, USC, Secs. 793 and 794, the trans- mission or revelation of which in any manner to an unauthorized person is prohibited by law. Approved For Release 2003/09/26 : CIA-RDP79T00472A000300020001-6 25X1 Approved For Release 2003/09/26 : CIA-RDP79T00472A000300020001-6 Approved For Release 2003/09/26 : CIA-RDP79T00472A000300020001-6 App d For Rel0ar Q03/0T 6 : CIA-RD f00472A000300020001-6 CONTENTS SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS........... ????????. Page e ? . . . . 1 1. The Setting ....................` ........... 5 II. The Exodus ........e.???.... 9 III. The Nature of the Dissidence.......... IV. Analysis of Control Measures.......... 13 Annex A. Personnel Shifts in Kwangtung Province 17 in 1962 ............................. Map Illegal Immigration into Hong Kong: 17 1961-62 ...................following page Approved For Release 2003/09/26 : CIA-RDP79T00472A000300020001-6 SECRET Appr ed For Rel 'b'b370J/26 : CIA-RDP7 00472A000300020001-6 SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS The massive exodus from Kwangtung Province to Hong Kong in May 1962 (see map) stands out as in- disputable evidence that dissident sentiment in that populous area of South China was both wide- spread and easily surfaced. The dissidence is traceable mainly to the grim economic conditions that existed in Kwangtung, but the exodus itself was brought on by one of the few instances in which tight controls were deliberately lifted. That the exodus grew to the proportions it did is due to the comparatively loose supervision Peiping was exer- cising over local authorities at the time., Beginning in late April, the controlled move- ment of approved emigrants from a particularly overcrowded section of urban and rural Kwangtung became a surge of more than 100,000 people toward Hong Kong after border controls were lifted on the Communist side. In spite of barriers thrown up by Hong Kong police, more than 50,000people fmanaged to get through by the end of May, w controls were reimposed by the Communists. The decision by Kwangtung officials to risk an uncontrolled exodus was taken shortly after receiving Peiping's order to reduce urban popula- tion in the province by some 30 percent--without resorting to force. Officials tried to meet this insoluble problem in part by encouraging further emigration, mainly of unemployed relatives of Overseas Chinese. A jam-up developed at the bor- der after unexpectedly large numbers of exit per- mits had been issued, whereupon controls were dropped entirely. Almost immediately, people that the regime presumably wanted to retain, such as young industrial and farm workers, began to take advantage of the lapsed border controls and made up most of the emigrant group. officials had badly underestimated the amount oo f popular disaffection among young people. theless, several weeks elapsed before controls were reimposed. Approved For Release 2003/09/26 : CIA-RDP79T00472A000300020001-6 SECRET Appr d For ReleaRc 9726: CIA-RDP7' 00472A000300020001-6 There was no resultant purge of responsible regional and local officials. Subsequent national policy decisions, however, indicated that the Kwangtung exodus had helped to show Peiping the nature and extent of popular dissidence in China and the deterioration in the over-all control mechanism that had occurred since the collapse of the Leap Forward. vii Approved For Release 2003/09/26 : CIA-RDP79T00472A000300020001-6 SECRET Appro tl?For Relea Gil '/26 : CIA-RDP7 0472A000300020001-6 1. THE SETTING A, The Pattern of Migration from Communist China o orn Normally, both Communist China and the over- crowded British colony of Hong Kong have recognized a mutual interest in controlling the flow of "ref- ugees" from the mainland into Hong Kong, and long ago both governments worked out a set of informal rules covering this delicate issue. Except for the extraordinary month of May 1962, Peiping has fol- lowed these rules in practice, The existence of a flow of legal and illegal im- migrants to Hong Kong does not necessarily mean that Communist China is substantially more lax than other police states. With few exceptions, exit permits are given only to unemployable people having relatives in Hong Kong and other Overseas Chinese communities. The steady flow of illegal escapees, leaving mostly in hired fishing junks, would be extremely difficult to stop, short of shutting down the South China fishing industry. Effective guarding of the land border usu- ally keeps the illegal flow overland down to a trickle. The Hong Kong Government's willingness to accept immigrants from China goes back to the Treaty of Nan- king in 1842, but the pressure of refugees from Com- munist rule in 1950-51 caused the British to restrict the legal flow to 50 Chinese per day, These have usually entered Hong Kong across the land border by train. This numerical restriction is easily circum- vented, however, for the Chinese Communists have only to make the exit permits valid for Macao. From this nearby Portuguese colony long-established smugglers will take the Chinese emigrants to Hong Kong by devious water routes. 11K. $t,.1`50 minimum ::tee in early 1962 wars k re, po r t e d. t y '.. some 1~1K: ~$ , 5;}O (US ?' $ 2 5) . The policy of the Macao Government has continued to be one of allowing free access to Chinese having no more than adequate identification papers, Those illegal immigrants who make their way successfully into Hong Kong, or are apprehended on one of the -1- Approved For Release 2003/09/26 : CIA-RDP79T00472A000300020001-6 SECRET Apprd For Rele FON9Y26 : CIA-RDP00472A000300020001-6 water routes, are generally allowed to remain in the British colony. They are,.in fact, encouraged to in- tegrate by simple registration procedures and to be- come self-sustaining through regular employment, The flow of illegal immigrants to Hong Kong in- creased steadily beginning in mid-1961, as the Chi- nese Communists issued exit permits somewhat more freely, and the official Communist China Travel Serv- ice facilitated the emigrants' contact with smug- gling rings in Macao. The resultant total of some 40,000 to 50,000 i1+legal.1mmigrants for the year 1961 probably exceeded substantially the flow of previous years. These additional people traveled. mostly by water, since the land border remained under close Communist guard. In line with the relatively lenient policies being followed throughout China in 1961 and early 19629 however, those caught trying to escape over the land border in those years were given less severe penalties than earlier, with some being merely warned against another attempt and sent back to their homes. As a result, the number trying to land rose, and by early 1962 Hong Kong pol arresting several hundred illegal entratts per month, as compared with ,a pre-1961 monthly average well be- low 1000 B. National Policies in Farly'1962 The spring of 1962 marked a low point in the Com- munist regime's confidence in its domestic policies. Natural disasters had strung out over three years, the collapse of the Great Leap Forward had brought large-scale unemployment, popular disaffection was widespread, and the prestige of the party had dropped alarmingly, even among rank-and-file party members. Confronted with widespread apathy and popular re- sentment in 1961 and early 1962, the regime ordered a general relaxation of policies. it reduced penal- ties for petty crime, eased travel restrictions, frag- mented the communes into collective units of 20 to 30 households called production teams, restored pri- vate farm plots and permitted some free market activity in food and other consumer Chinese. tion ofunemployedrelatgivessof a?verseas encouraged Approved For Release 2003/09/26 : CIA-RDP79T00472A000300020001-6 SECRET Appr&d For ReleSAF1'9 /45 : CIA-RDP 00472A000300020001-6 One of the most pressing tasks of the period was to reduce to manageable proportions the approximately 30 million unemployed people in the cities, who had been brought in from the countryside since 1957 for industrial employment. Efforts to persuade them to return home proved to be largely ineffective, Rural conditions were worse than in the cities and vil- lagers were reluctant to spread their already tight rations. Many urban residents refused to leave, or returned to the cities after going to the countryside. The problem of reducing urban population was still being dealt with only half-heartedly at the end of 1961, Then, in April 1962, Premier Chou En-lai frankly told the National People's Congress that the Great Leap was dead, and that he did not expect early economic recovery, He called for further industrial retrenchment, and told the Congress that transfer of redundant urban workers back to their villages to aug- ment the agricultural labor force had become the na- tion's foremost task. The problems of insufficient food and of urban unemployment had combined to raise the potential seriousness of the security situation in urban areas, The regime's previous concern over dissidence in rural areas had been increased by the open resistance, which had developed in Honan and other parts of central and eastern China from 1960 to 1961. C. The Situation in Kwangtung The people who left Kwangtung in May 1962 had good reason to be discontented with conditions there. In both quantity and quality, food supplies in Kwang- tung were approaching seriously low levels in the spring of 1962? Several months' drought, which was broken only toward the end of May,1962 (and then by floods), had erased the prospect of much if any im- provement in the food situation for another year, Ra- tions in Canton were better than in rural Kwangtung, but they-were still insufficient to provide energy for normal work and to maintain health. Cholera had taken thousands of lives in Kwangtung the previous summer, and it was expected to recur in 19620 -3- Approved For Release 2003/09/26 : CIA-RDP79T00472A000300020001-6 SECRET Appr6wed For Rele Q9*26 : CIA-RDP 100472A000300020001-6 Reduced job and educational opportunities contributed to the grim situation in and around Canton. As in the rest of China, Canton had shut down many factories and was operating others at reduced rates, Many lower level schools had closed in 1961, and by early 1962 it was clear in Canton that the closing of many higher schools would soon increase the number of unemployed. It was also clear to the authorities that the 1961 plan to reduce Canton's population by only 200,000 people was inadequate. A new target of 600,000 was adopted (the population of Canton was 205 million); but, as elsewhere in China, enforce- ment of the policy was difficult and there was continued reluctance to use force on noncooperative urban residents. In Canton, police stations and street Commit- tees made certain that those people registered in the city after 1958 fully understood the retrench- ment regulations. Given one month to leave Canton for their native villages, many chose to remain; and, forfeiting their urban ration cards, became "drifters" living off relatives or fending for themselves. Many became involved in black market activities. Regular employment was of course denied them, Many who were willing to leave Canton had difficulty getting accepted back in their villages, Endlessly stalled off when applying for new regis- tration certificates and ration cards, they re- turned to Canton. There, the returnees entered a limbo in which urban officials shunned responsibility for their presence. Under these circumstances, Peiping's decision in April 1962 to relax emigration rules further was welcomed by both urban and rural officials, who lost little time in taking favorable action on past applications for exit permits and even invited new ones. Relaxing controls is not the same thing as dropping them, however, and the dramatic change in May was still apparently unanticipated by the Chi- nese officials concerned. -4- Approved For Release 2003/09/26 : CIA-RDP79T00472A000300020001-6 SECRET Apprgd For ReleeB 9/26 : CIA-RDP f00472A000300020001-6 IL, THE EXODUS The abrupt dropping of border controls and the subsequent surge of more than 100,000 Chinese in Kwangtung. Province toward Hong Kong during May 1962 at the time. but baffled outside observers con i en s a em?nts about the events themselves and the causal factors at work. in April 1962 Kwangtung officials received permission from Peiping to increase ofrtherurbanflow s n K g, o of emigration to Hong trenchment effort. Detailed planning and execution were left in the hands of the Kwangtung authorities security situationagainst the on the assumption ~riousthey serious development of a Many new exit permits were quickly issued, far in excess of Hong Kong's quota of 50 perTdaday, and a transportation problem soon developed, holders had been at first shunted to Macao, but the smuggling rings that would normally take them were unable to handle the increased flow, especially since Hong Kong water police were bc becoming igilant, Many would-be emigrants became turned to Canton, At this point, about 1 May 1962, Kwangtung officials made the decision to lift rlsoalong the land border with Hong Kong, apparently lieve congestion on the Macao route and in Canton itself. Further opening of the valve controlling emigration flow from Kwangtung had beeennupreeddiicttablle, but not the complete waiving of any an exit permit to leave the Kwangtung side, Though unannounced by Communist officials, word of these policy changes was surely expteditoth, spread, There were still factors implicit situation, however, that might have been expected to keep the flow of people within safe bounds. Commu- nist border guards remained at their posts, though few of them made any effort to hinder the crossers. Some of the guards even showed people Approved For Release 2003/09/26 : CIA-RDP79T00472A000300020001-6 SECRET Appr ed For ReleSfiGh " 26 : CIA-RD TOO472A000300020001-6 but the rugged hills posed a formidable ' barrier In additions Hong Kong Government efforts to stop expected to on teracould immigrants water the water could flow of people0 Finally, Chore was the general at? l c m which in mosphere of control thtoughout China ~one sought to develop people would be reluctant to get out of line and head for the border without first trying to get a permit it was soon clear, however, that Peipinggeandhe Kwangtung officials had grossly und u seize this o or unit ld number of eo le who wo to le ay ~u %,1Yae ---- ---- - t!]11g east sprea~, y word of mouth thwhathhad beeneintended as Ma id - a ithin days o BY m w p exodus an i uncontrolledf _ of a y, controlled emigrants e had t become limited proved made up largely of able-bodied young industrial and farm workers Continued increase in still brought the border in this third week of May no reimposition of Communist controls at the border On 21 May, however, regular Chinese troops rep some border guards, and there were indications of travel restriction farther inland. Rumors spread that the rwould close ains withinthea rem 24?2~i May heavy side the C t e o inese h imposition of controls on of ream st land border with Hong Kong emigrant flow was successfully shunted back through -6- Approved For Release 2003/09/26 : CIA-RDP79T00472A000300020001-6 SECRET Appr&d For Rele16 : CIA-RDP00472A000300020001-6 Macao, and it quickly returned in size to a level that posed no serious security threat in Kwangtungo The makeup of the emigrant group was controlled again by the requirement of exit permits. In mid-July Hong Kong authorities warned that the colony still faced a major crisis in this con- tinuing flow of illegal immigrants over water routes emanating from Macao. The successful penetration of water patrols by some 20,000 people in the two months after the closing of the land border caused the Hong Kong Government to form a special joint force of augmented sea and land forces to patrol the colony's waters and shores. A new temporary police policy of firing on fleeing junks and destroying those captured brought rapid increase in smugglers' fees and caused some to lie low, Finally, in September, the flow of illegal immigrants fell off sharply as a result of tightening controls in China. By the end of 1962 Hong Kong's statistics on registration of new residents revealed that more than 50,000 people had entered the colony illegally via the land route in May. It is probable that at least an equal number reached the border, but failed to get through the augmented Hong Kong border guards, or turned back en route upon hearing discouraging rumors prior to the border's closing. Adding to these fig- ures the continuing flow of perhaps 3,000 emigrants over the water route during the period of the exodus, it may be concluded that more than 100,000 residents of Kwangtung showed their disaffection by heading for the border in May 19620 ?7- Approved For Release 2003/09/26 : CIA-RDP79T00472A000300020001-6 SE CRE T Appra6 d For ReleW9W26 : CIA-RDP 00472A000300020001-6 Ill. THE 11 TURE OF THE DISSIDENCE There are some inconsistencies in the exodus story. For many who turned their backs on home and family, the trek to Hong Kong was a rigorous one; yet, they were submissive when turned back across the border and ultimately sent back whence they came. Also, the massiveness of the exodus and the rapidity of its build-up stand in sharp contrast to the collapse of the movement upon the reimposi- tion of controls. But a. closer look at the nature of the dissidence expressed in the exodus makes it clear that these inconsistencies are only apparent. Popular discontent with the grim economic and social conditions in Kwangtung was undoubtedly heightened somewhat by the obvious contrast with Hong Kong, but the positive attraction of the al- ready overcrowded colony was limited. Employment prospects in Hong Kong were falling off in the spring of 1962. The projected loss of "imperial preference P9 with Britain's anticipated entry into the Common Market and the cutback in production for the United States market had cast a dark shadow over the colony's industry and led to a layoff of thousands of workers in early 1962. By the end of 1961 some 440,000 squatters had been resettled in government-built housing, but 520,000 others had taken their places in the hill- side shacks and rooftop tenements of the colony. Medical facilities, which proved capable of pre- venting the threatened cholera epidemic of 1961, were strained to capacity. The Hong Kong Govern- ment's goal of universal primary education had come within reach by 1961, but of the 90,000 chil- dren entering primary school only one fifth would find places in secondary schools. Of those only one twentieth could look forward to some kind of post-secondary educations Hong Kong's relative freedom of thought and action for the individual was a recognizable goal for the people of Kwangtung but a vague one. -9- Approved For Release 2003/09/26 : CIA-RDP79T00472A000300020001-6 SECRET Appra+Wd For ReleAW26 : CIA-RDP7901'00472A000300020001-6 Due to the constant large-scale movement of Hong Kong residents to and from Kwangtung, and the large amount of letter writing back and forth, these conditions in Hong Kong were probably well.-known in general terms to the people in Kwangtung. The discontent of many had deepened into disaffection strong enough to make them leave Kwangtung in May. They were not desperate, however, and the attrac- tion of Hong Kong was not sufficient to make them resist being sent back to Kwangtung. Their disaf- fection found its expression in noncooperation with local Kwangtung authorities, but even this form of passive resistance was ea