Between 1978 and 2000, a number of detention centres were formed by the Corrections Department in Hong Kong for the internment of Vietnamese refugees. As the government of Hong Kong took more actions against the refugees, tightened restrictions and deporting them to Vietnam, the centres were depopulated and disestablished over time.
CSD's Vietnamese Migrants Detention Centres (VMDCs) refer to some of the camps for Vietnamese migrants set up by the Hong Kong Correctional Services Department (CSD) throughout the territory between the 1970s and 1990s in response to the Vietnamese migrant problem in Hong Kong. Since 1978, when the Prison Department, the predecessor of the CSD, established its first detention centre near Kai Tak Airport in Kowloon, the department has been working with other agencies to receive VBP, and at one time set up a Refugee Unit and recruited additional temporary staff to participate in management matters. [1] : 44 The last detention centre near the High Island Reservoir in Sai Kung was closed in 1998, bringing an end to the CSD's Vietnamese boat service. [1] : 46
The first Vietnamese refugees arrived on the same day of the fall of Saigon, and in 1979 there was another wave of Chinese exclusion in Vietnam, causing a large number of Vietnamese boat people to flee to other parts of Asia, with some 203,000 people smuggled by boat to the Pearl River Delta in the last 20 years alone. [1] : 41 In 1978, the Government decided to convert the former Royal Air Force Base into the Kai Tak Refugee Camp and let the Prison Department take over, and since then it has been involved in the management of Vietnamese migrants. [2] In the same year, the Prison Department cleared the inmates of the Ma Po Ping Addiction Treatment Centre in Tong Fuk, Lantau Island, and opened an additional camp. [1] : 44
A record number of 70,000 refugees arrived the next year, including 2,700 who had been on the Skyluck and ran it aground, adding to the issue. [3] As more refugees streamed in, the Hong Kong government converted prisons and barracks to refugee camps. [1] : 43 In 1982, the Hong Kong government changed its mind and stipulated that boat people who entered Hong Kong after July 1 of that year must enter a closed camp. Those who stayed in the camp were not allowed to go out or leave the camp to work. The Education Department immediately converted some prisons into closed camps. [4] : 100–101 In the same year, the Correctional Services Department established the Refugee Unit and began recruiting contractual temporary staff to assist existing correctional staff to share management tasks. These employees received a two-week intensive training course on immigration regulations, camp regulations, marching and crowd management skills, and the Vietnamese language. By the end of 1998, 1,813 temporary staff were hired. [1] : 45 The adoption of the Comprehensive Plan of Action led to more stringent checks on migrants and more deportations back to their home countries or repatriation to other states more willing to accept refugees.
As Hong Kong was a "port of first asylum," the number of boat people in Hong Kong continued to increase in the 1980s with around 20,000 to 30,000 new arrivals every year causing the Correctional Services Department detention centres to fill up. [5] As a result, the department has to continue to set up detention centres and even designate the industrial buildings in Tuen Mun as temporary accommodation for boat people to meet their urgent needs. [1] : 45 In 1988, the Government abolished the closed-camp policy and replaced it with a screening policy leading to the CSD creating the post of "Assistant Commissioner (Vietnamese Shipping Services)". [6] On the other hand, the Hong Kong Government has instead set up large detention centres at Whitehead in Ma On Shan and High Island Reservoir in Sai Kung to accommodate the large number of boat people. [1] : 45
In the 1990s, the Hong Kong Government began to carry out orderly repatriation operations to ensure the safe return of the boat people to Vietnam, which led to a decline in the number of boat people in Hong Kong. [7] [8] [9] It was second only to the 1991 riots at Sek Kong that left 24 refugees dead. [1] : 47 The repatriation process proceeded smoothly and the detention centres were gradually closed and restored to their original correctional use. The 'Assistant Director (Vietnamese Boat Service)' position was abolished by 1997 [10] and in 1998, the Sai Kung High Island Detention Centre was officially closed, ending the Correctional Services Department's Vietnamese boat service. [11]
Name | District | Location | Notes | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
Cape Collinson Correctional Institution (Refugee Section) | Eastern | Cape Collinson Road, Chai Wan | In 1979, part of the land was opened up to detain the Vietnamese. It was called the "Cape Collinson Refugee Camp" and was further converted into a confinement camp in 1983. During this period, the refugee camp was closed twice, but soon it became a refugee camp equipment and set up a refugee group. | [4] : 100–101 |
Green Island Reception Centre | Central and Western | Green Island | In 1987, a group of Vietnamese boat people from Mainland China flocked to Hong Kong. Civil Security Service immediately arranged camps for them in Qingzhou (the Sunyield Detention Center also accepted them at the same time), and then transferred them to correctional facilities. Department management. After 1998, it was used to receive and refer illegal immigrants. It was closed in 2011 and has remained vacant. | [12] : 26 |
Name | District | Location | Notes | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
Canton Road Refugee Camp | Yau Tsim Mong District | Warehouse at Tsim Sha Tui Government Dock Tsim Sha Tsui | The site for the resettlement of Vietnamese boat people at the beginning of the Vietnamese boat people crisis, who were subsequently sent to the Sham Shui Po Detention Centre and the Chatham Road Refugee Camp run by the Civil Aid Service. | [1] : 41 [12] : 4 |
Kai Tak refugee camp | Kwun Tong | Kwun Tong Road, Kowloon Bay (now a Caritas Family Crisis Support Centre ) | After the British military in Hong Kong moved from RAF Kai Tak to Shek Kong Airfield in 1978, part of the land was used as a refugee camp. Management was transferred to the Civil Aid Service in 1989 | [13] |
Sham Shui Po refugee camp | Sham Shui Po | Lai Chi Kok Road, Sham Shui Po (now Lai On Estate) | Used to house refugees between 1978 and 1989. | [14] |
Name | District | Location | Notes | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
Chi Ma Wan Detention Centre (Upper and Lower) | Islands | Chi Ma Wan, Lantau Island (now Correctional Services Department Staff Training Venue) | After the Skyluck incident in 1979, the Hong Kong government chose Chi Ma Wan Prison as a place of containment, and the Prison Department made room for it to be converted into a detention center. In 1982, the additional camp built on the football field to the northwest of the original Chi Ma Wan Prison was officially put into operation. In 1994, the detention center ceased operation, the upper camp was changed back to Chi Ma Wan Correctional Institution, and the lower camp became Chi Ma Wan Rehabilitation Center. | [3] [15] |
Hei Ling Chau Detention Centre | Islands | Hei Ling Chau (now Hei Ling Chau Correctional Institution) | It was built in the east of Hei Ling Chau in 1982, and closed in 1994 and changed to Hei Ling Chau Correctional Institution. | [16] |
High Island Detention Centre | Sai Kung District | High Island Reservoir | Initially managed by the Hong Kong Police, and then by the CSD from 1991. The construction of the centre was delayed by two months after concerned Sai Kung residents staged a sit-in at the site. It opened in 1989 and closed in May 1998. During that period, more than 20,000 boat people passed through its doors. | [17] [18] |
Lo Wu Detention Centre | North | Sheung Shui (now Lo Wu Correctional Institution) | Formerly the Lo Wu Military Camp, it was changed to a detention center in 1989, but closed in 1997 and changed to the first generation Lo Wu Correctional Institution. | [19] [20] |
Nei Kwu Detention Centre | Islands | Hei Ling Chau (now Nei Kwu Correctional Institution) | In addition to the Hei Ling Chau Detention Center, the Correctional Services Department also converted the Li Gu Chau Detention Center into a Li Gu Detention Center. After its closure in 1997, it was planned to be converted into a drug rehabilitation center, but it was not implemented until 2002. | [20] |
Sun Yick Industrial Building | Tuen Mun District | Tuen Mun Industrial Area | In 1987, a group of Vietnamese boat people from mainland China flocked to Hong Kong. The Civil Security Team immediately settled them in the vacant Sun Yick Industrial Building in Tuen Mun (there was also the Green Island Detention Center to accept them at the same time), and then transferred to the Correctional Services Department. This temporary arrangement lasted around two years. On May 21, 1990, the camp was handed over to Housing Department for management, and was merged into the Hudi Detention Center in Tuen Mun on August 31 of the same year. | [12] : 4 [21] [22] |
Tong Fuk Detention Centre | Islands | Tong Fuk, Lantau Island (now Tong Fuk Correctional Institution) | Opened in 1978, this was one of the first camps. | [1] : 44 |
Tuen Mun Detention Centre | Tuen Mun District | Castle Peak Road, Tuen Mun (now part of Lingnan University's campus) | Originally a closed camp, it was handed over to the Housing Department in 1990 and converted into an open camp. The short story 'Tigerland', about Vietnamese children escaping from the camp, was inspired by the camp and was later collected in a book of fiction called 'The Hand Scroll'. A few pieces of the wire mesh base from the detention centre still remain outside the Patrick Lee Wan Keung Academic Building at Lingnan University. | [23] |
Whitehead Detention Centre | Sha Tin | Wu Kai Sha, Ma On Shan | After its formation in 1989, the centre became notorious for the numerous riots that occurred inside throughout its existence. Officially closed in 1997 after all remaining residents were repatriated. | [24] [25] |
Tai A Chau is an uninhabited island of Hong Kong, part of the Soko Islands group, located south of Lantau Island. It is referred to as South Soko Island in some media articles.
The Immigration Department of the Government of Hong Kong is responsible for immigration control of Hong Kong. After the People's Republic of China assumed sovereignty of the territory in July 1997, Hong Kong's immigration system remained largely unchanged from its British predecessor model. Residents from mainland China do not have the right of abode in Hong Kong, nor can they enter the territory freely, both before and after 1997. There are different regulations that apply to residents of Macau, another Special Administrative Region of China. In addition, visa-free entry acceptance regulations into Hong Kong for passport holders of some 170 countries remain unchanged before and after 1997.
Bat lau dung laai is a Hong Kong Cantonese corruption of the Vietnamese phrase bắt đầu từ nay, meaning "from now on".
Chi Ma Wan is a bay on southeastern Lantau Island, New Territories, Hong Kong. Chi Ma Wan Peninsula is where Chi Ma Wan, as well as Cheung Sha Wan, Tai Long Wan, Yi Long Wan and Mong Tung Wan are located. The Peninsula is located within the boundaries of Lantau South Country Park.
Many of the Vietnamese people in Hong Kong immigrated as a result of the Vietnam War and persecution since the mid-1970s.
Correctional Services Department (CSD) is responsible for the management of prisoners and prisons in Hong Kong. The Commissioner of Correctional Services reports to the Secretary for Security.
Hong Kong is an official bilingual territory. Under article 9 of the Hong Kong Basic Law, and the Official Languages Ordinance, Both Chinese and English are equally official languages of the territory. However, no particular variety of "Chinese" referred to in laws is specified. While Mandarin written in simplified Chinese characters is used as the standard language in mainland China, Cantonese in traditional Chinese characters is the de facto standard in Hong Kong.
The Civil Human Rights Front (CHRF) was an organisation that focused on the issues of Hong Kong politics and livelihood, affiliated with almost all pan-democratic camps in Hong Kong. It was founded on 13 September 2002 and disbanded on 15 August 2021.
McRefugee is a neologism and McWord referring to those who stay overnight in a 24-hour McDonald's fast food restaurant.
Vietnamese boat people were refugees who fled Vietnam by boat and ship following the end of the Vietnam War in 1975. This migration and humanitarian crisis was at its highest in the late 70s and early 80s, but continued well into the early 1990s. The term is also often used generically to refer to the Vietnamese people who left their country in a mass exodus between 1975 and 1995. This article uses the term "boat people" to apply only to those who fled Vietnam by sea.
The 1987 Lieyu massacre occurred on 7 March 1987 at Donggang Bay, Lieyu Island, Kinmen, Fujian, Republic of China (ROC) when soldiers from the ROC Army's 185 Heavy Infantry Division killed 24 Vietnamese refugees on the shoreline of Donggang Bay, including 4 Hoa families, 8 children, 5 women and 11 men. The ROC military officially denied the massacre and defined it as an incident of "accidental manslaughter" (誤殺事件), hence referring to it as the March 7 Incident (三七事件) or Donggang Incident (東崗事件).
San Uk Ling Holding Centre is a detention centre in Man Kam To, Hong Kong. Located a few hundred metres away from the Man Kam To Control Point, a boundary crossing facility between Hong Kong and mainland China, the centre opened in July 1979 to house illegal immigrants prior to their repatriation.
Tai Tau Chau also known for its less popular name Urn Island, is an island in the water body Sham Tuk Mun (深篤門), Sai Kung District, Hong Kong. Inner Port Shelter and Rocky Harbour are in close proximity to the island.
Sam Cheung Ho-sum is a Hong Kong politician, social activist, and former member of the Tuen Mun District Council for San Hui.
The High Island Detention Centre was a refugee camp in Hong Kong built near the West Dam of High Island Reservoir for hosting refugees and boat people from Vietnam. The area is now a flat piece of grassland that is grazed by cows. It has a pavilion that leads out of the strip of land.
Tai Tam Gap Correctional Institution is a prison in Eastern District, Hong Kong, operated by Hong Kong Correctional Services.
Immigration to Hong Kong is the process by which people migrate to the Chinese special administrative region of Hong Kong for the purpose of residing there. The region has its own Hong Kong immigration policy governing how such migration may be carried, including for those immigrating from mainland China.
The penal system of Hong Kong, with its colonial tradition, is responsible for carrying out criminal penalties and the supervision and rehabilitation of former prisoners.
All Black Football Club is a football club based in Hong Kong.