Helen Ho was included in the list of members of the Hong Kong delegation who participated in the 1946 London Victory Parade.
Miss Helen Ho, 29-year-old Chinese girl, heroine of Hongkong, marched in the Victory Parade in London. She smuggled medicine to Allied prisoners of war in Hongkong, using marmalade jars. False tops were made for the jars, the discs being stuck on with plasticine and a note of the medicine in the cover (1). She was taken prisoner twice by the Japanese. In recognition of Miss Ho's courage the Government of Hongkong have arranged an 18 months' scholarship to enable her to train as an almoner for the Hongkong hospital.
sources: 18 Sep, 1946, Bay of Plenty Times
(1) According to the Records of H. L. Cleave, the surgeon at the time in the prisoner of war camp 'N' :
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Court Case Exposes Reasons for Monitoring of Helen and Yvonne
John Charter writes about Helen Ho's experiences during the war in his diary entry for 22 Aug 1945, the day that Helen and her sister Yvonne came in to Stanley Camp soon after the Japanese surrender:
The Hector Lee court case revealed the reasons why Helen Ho and Yvonne Ho were secretly monitored :