Tilanqiao Prison
The Tilanqiao Prison (Chinese: 提篮桥监狱; pinyin: Tílánqiáo Jiānyù), formerly known as the Ward Road Gaol, is a prison in Hongkou District of Shanghai, China. Originally built in the foreign-controlled Shanghai International Settlement, it is now run by the Chinese Ministry of Public Security. Throughout the first forty or so years of its life it was the largest prison in the world and earned a reputation as the "Alcatraz of the Orient".[1]
Ward Road Gaol Period (1903-1941)
Tilanqiao Prison was built to hold those convicted of crimes in Shanghai's International Settlement. Prior to its construction foreign convicts were held in ad hoc prisons within their consulates (or, if British, the Amoy Road Gaol) until they could be returned to their home country, and Chinese citizens were handed over to the native Chinese authorities. In 1901, however, with the growing size of the International Settlement and, in the aftermath of the Boxer Rebellion, a fear the Qing government could no longer control its citizens, the Shanghai Municipal Council drew up plans for a modern-style jail based on Singaporean and Canadian designs. Construction began at 117 Ward Road that year, with the first prisoners introduced to their cells on 18 May 1903.[2]
Originally comprising 450 cells across two four-storey blocks, the prison was expanded after the 1911 Xinhai Revolution, when the previously Chinese-run courts of the Settlement were abandoned by the Qing government and occupied by the Shanghai Municipal Police (SMP). Further extensions took place in 1916 and continued until 1935 when the prison reached a grand total of some 70,000 square metres (17 acres), including six prison blocks, a juvenile block, a hospital, an administration block, workshops, a kitchen and laundry, and an execution chamber, all surrounded by a five metre tall wall with guard-towers.[3] The execution chamber is considered unique in pre-Second World War China in that it carried out death by hanging, with the body dropping through a trapdoor directly into the prison hospital's morgue. Over the years specialist rooms were added to the prison, including 'isolation rooms' with rubber wallpaper, and a secure command centre for regrouping in event of a riot.
The prison population comprised a mix of Chinese and European males found guilty by the Settlement's consular courts (though some European countries preferred not to send convicts to Ward Road Gaol, instead deporting them). Female Chinese convicts were only interned in Ward Road between 1904 and 1906,[2][4] after which they were sent to female prisons elsewhere in the province. European women were housed in a Foreign Women's Block, but this closed in 1922 and women were placed in the French Concession's prison. In 1925 a decision was made to no longer imprison Western convicts at Ward Road, instead sending them to the Settlement's Caucasian-only prison: Amoy Road Gaol.
Between 1925 and 1930 Ward Road Gaol was therefore a prison predominantly housing Chinese prisoners, controlled and run by a predominantly British and Indian staff. In 1930 Chiang Kai-shek's Kuomintang government negotiated for all male prisoners, Western or Chinese, to be sent to Ward Road Gaol and for it to be run as close to Chinese guidelines as possible. This was agreed in theory, though the British staff were unwilling to enforce Chinese discipline as provided in the guidelines, as this was considered harsh - even by the prison's own rough standards.
For its existence, Ward Road Gaol has been considered one of the harshest in the world. Silence was enforced at all times and overcrowding was rife. In 1934 there were only 2925 cells between its 6000 inmates. Tuberculosis was found in nearly 65% of long-term prisoners, suicide was not uncommon, and discipline was enforced through physical punishment by use of long batons. The majority of warders were Indian Sikhs, who were generally despised by Chinese prisoners. Western prisoners were separated from the Chinese and were relatively better cared for, being given lighter duties, separate cells and softer uniforms. After 1930 they too were officially brought under the same discipline system as the Chinese, however.[5]
Wartime Period (1932-1949)
After the First Battle of Shanghai ended with the de facto control of Hongkou, Ward Road Gaol found itself located in the middle of the Japanese-controlled sector of the International Settlement. Again, during the hostilites of 1937, the prison was trapped between the Chinese and Japanese armies. It was accidentally shelled a number of times, with prisoners killed and guards injured. A short cease-fire allowed 500 prisoners to be released to safe areas, but the Japanese cancelled further prisoner releases after the Municipal Council stated it could not simply turn loose young offenders into a dangerous environment.
The Imperial Japanese Army (IJA) let the Municipal Council process and detain Chinese and foreign prisoners in Ward Road until 1941, when the IJA launched its occupation of the International Settlement as the opener to the Pacific War. Taken over by the Japanese and used to hold both civil and political prisoners, the prison nonetheless retained many of its Sikh and European guards. This changed when it was turned over to the Wang Jingwei Government in 1943, and subsequently renamed Tilanqiao Prison after the surrounding district. For the rest of the war the prison was used to hold thousands of Chinese dissidents who dissented against the Nanjing government, Western prisoners of war, and some European civilians. Many prisoners were removed from the prison by the Japanese and used as forced labour. It was during the Japanese residency of the site that Ward Road saw its first and only escape, when two Americans and one British naval officer, all Allied POW's, managed to escape from the prison with Chinese assistance. Marine Corporal Jerold B. Story, USN officer C.D. Smith, and British naval officer John Wooley, traveled 700 miles over seven weeks across Japanese-occupied China until they reached friendly forces.
In 1945 the Axis Powers surrendered and Tilanqiao Prison was brought under the control of Chiang Kai-shek 's Kuomintang government. The KMT used the prison to detain several hundred Japanese war criminals and a number of Chinese who had been part of Wang Jingwei's government. In 1947 the first trials of these criminals were held. Thirteen Chinese hanjian prisoners being executed inside the prison's walls.
Modern Period (1950-)
With the victory of the Communists (PRC) in the Chinese Civil War in 1949, Shanghai's Tilanqiao Prison was brought under the control of the Municipal Military Control Commission and renamed the Shanghai People's Prison. In 1951 it was turned over to the civil Public Security Bureau and again renamed; this time to Shanghai Prison. It continued under this name until 1995 when it was named Shanghai Tilanqiao Prison.[2]
Today Tilanqiao Prison is one of China's largest and most (in)famous prisons, often held and reported as a model prison by the PRC state.[6][7] Nevertheless, human rights groups and Western governments argue the prison continues to engage in torture, deprivation and cruelty.[8] Allegations of torture and ill-treatment toward high-profile prisoners such as Mao Hengfeng have been used to highlight apparent abuses at the prison.[9]
See also
References
Citations
- ↑ Phillips, Tom (5 July 2013), "China prepares to close down its "city of the doomed"", The Daily Telegraph
- 1 2 3 "上海市提篮桥监狱", Shanghai Chronicle (in Chinese) (Shanghai Municipal Government), retrieved 17 January 2015
- ↑ Dikötter 2002, p. 311.
- ↑ Dikötter 2002, p. 321.
- ↑ Dikötter 2002, pp. 318-321.
- ↑ Qiao, Lijing, "Inside High Walls: Prisons in Shanghai and Suzhou", Human Rights (China Society for Human Rights Studies), retrieved 17 January 2015
- ↑ Stevenson 2011, Chapter 8.
- ↑ "DOCUMENT - CHINA: FEAR OF TORTURE OR ILL-TREATMENT/ PRISONER OF CONSCIENCE: ZHENG ENCHONG (M)", Amnesty International
- ↑ "Mao Hengfeng: Amnesty urgent action", The Guardian, 25 June 2011, retrieved 17 January 2015
Sources
- Dikötter, Frank (2002), Crime, Punishment and the Prison in Modern China, Columbia University Press, ISBN 9780231125086
- Stevenson, Dominic (2011), Monkey House Blues: A Shanghai Prison Memoir, Random House, ISBN 9781845968854
Coordinates: 31°15′20″N 121°30′37″E / 31.25556°N 121.51028°E