Stanley Prison
Location | Stanley, Hong Kong |
---|---|
Coordinates | 22°12′43″N 114°13′08″E / 22.21194°N 114.21889°ECoordinates: 22°12′43″N 114°13′08″E / 22.21194°N 114.21889°E |
Capacity | 1,714 |
Opened | 1937 |
Managed by | Hong Kong Correctional Services Department |
Stanley Prison (Chinese: 赤柱監獄 c. January 1937, previously known as Hong Kong Prison at Stanley) is one of the six maximum security facilities in Hong Kong.[1]
History
Built in 1937, Stanley Prison is currently the oldest institution still in service (the oldest prison built in Hong Kong was Victoria Prison, which ceased operation on 24 December 2005[2]) and houses both male adult convicted prisoners and male adult remand prisoners. It was set up by the then Prisons Department, and is now administered by the Correctional Services Department. The maximum capacity of the prison is 1,714 and has over 800 staff and officers. Stanley Prison, at the time of its construction, was considered to be one of the finest prisons in the British Empire. It was a modern structure built of stone, concrete and steel and consisted of six cell blocks set behind an 18-foot wall. It was originally designed to house 1,500 prisoners.
Before Hong Kong officially abolished the death penalty in 1993, Stanley Prison had been a place of execution that saw the execution of criminals between 1946 and 1966. Although the law did not change until 1993, the last execution that was carried out in Stanley Prison was in November 1966.[3] (This figure (122) does not include the large number of prisoners who were killed by the Japanese during the occupation of Hong Kong in World War II—see below.) The area which once housed the gallows has now been replaced with the prison hospital.
Japanese occupation
Hong Kong fell to the invading Japanese on Christmas Day 1941 following a brief but brutal conflict. During the Japanese occupation, the grounds of the prison were used as part of Stanley Internment Camp. It was a place of torture and execution, with Mateen Ansari, who was posthumously awarded the George Cross for his heroism in resisting the Japanese, as one of the most famous victims. During the Japanese invasion of China, refugees crawled across the border to Hong Kong and many became hawkers on the streets. Those who were caught were sent to Stanley Prison and soon the inmate population grew to over 3,000, well over its limits.
Nearly 600 prisoners of war and civilians, killed by the Japanese during the occupation, are buried in the nearby Stanley War Cemetery.[4]
Hong Kong Correctional Services Museum
Adjacent to Stanley Prison is the Hong Kong Correctional Services Museum.[5] The museum is housed in a two-storey building next to the parade ground of the Staff Training Institute of the Correctional Services Department in Stanley. It has an area of 480 square metres with a collection of some 600 artefacts.
See also
Notes
- ↑ "Maximum Security Institutions". Hong Kong Correctional Services. Archived from the original on March 11, 2005. Retrieved 24 January 2016.
- ↑ "A Chronology of CSD's Development and Penal Measures of Hong Kong: 1980's to Now". Hong Kong Correctional Services. 2007-04-17. Retrieved 2007-11-11.
- ↑ The last execution in Hong Kong was carried out on 16 November 1966 when Wong Kai-Kei, age 26, was hanged at Stanley Prison. See: "Demise of the Death Penalty", South China Morning Post, 23 March 2004. Official Notebook of Mr R.V Brimmicombie-Wood recording executions in 1966. On display at Hong Kong Correctional Services Museum.
- ↑ "Grave Locations - China (incl. Hong Kong)". Australia War Graves Photographic Archive. Retrieved 2007-11-11.
- ↑ "Hong Kong Correctional Services Museum". Hong Kong Correctional Services. Archived from the original on February 17, 2006. Retrieved 24 January 2016.
External links
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