When the death knell sounded for Kowloon Walled City – Hong Kong’s ‘dirty old wart’
Often described as the City of Darkness, the fate of this 2.8 hectare plot of lawlessness, one of the most densely populated places on the planet, was sealed in 1987 when China gave approval for its demolition
“Kowloon Walled City Doomed” read one of a flurry of headlines in the South China Morning Post on January 15, 1987, on news that the way had been opened for clearance of the site after years of wrangling between Hong Kong and the Chinese government. “Beijing gives its backing” and “Clearance of ‘dirty old wart’ hailed”, chimed in others.
The former site of a Qing dynasty fort, the Walled City had “been regarded as part of China even after the New Territories were ceded to the British in 1898”, although China’s sovereignty claim over the 2.8-hectare site had been a bone of contention, its status described as “a question left over from history”.
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“The signing of the Sino-British Joint Declaration [in 1984] on the future of Hongkong […] provided the impetus to resolve the Kowloon Walled City issue,” the Post reported.
The Walled City was described as a place where “40,000 people have lived packed in illegal, squalid and unsafe boxes stacked up to 15 stories high […] many of the rooms illegally caged to keep burglars and unwanted tenants out […] In place of the teeming enclave, where crime, vice and drugs have a stranglehold, the Government will build a park”, which it subsequently did.
“They registered 19,606 people from 5,116 families. There were 22 families who refused to be registered by the department staff. A total of 760 business establishments were registered and 57 premises were locked and unanswered,” the Post reported.
“First blow landed as the walls come tumbling down”, ran the headline in the Poston March 24, 1993, a day after demolition began.