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Shanghai Women's Prison (Chinese: 上海市女子监狱), also called Songjiang Women's Prison, is a women's prison in Songjiang District, Shanghai, China. [1] It is a part of the Shanghai Prison Administrative Bureau. It has over 1,000 prisoners and is the only such correctional facility for women in the direct-controlled municipality. Its ...
Douyin video screenshot, showing Feng County woman Yang was chained to the neck, locked in a broken house.. The Xuzhou chained woman incident (Chinese: 徐州铁链女事件), also known as the Xuzhou eight-child mother incident (Chinese: 徐州八孩母亲事件), is a case of human trafficking, false imprisonment, sexual assault, severe mistreatment, and subsequent events that came to light ...
Beijing Women's Prison (simplified Chinese: 北京市女子监狱; traditional Chinese: 北京市女子監獄; pinyin: Běijīng Shì Nǚzǐ Jiānyù) is a prison in Daxing District, Beijing, China. [1] It was established in 1999. It is operated by the Beijing Municipal Administration of Prisons.
Pages in category "Women's prisons in China" The following 6 pages are in this category, out of 6 total. ... Sichuan Provincial Women's Prison; T. Tai Lam Centre for ...
Elke Tsang Kai-mong (simplified Chinese: 张凯梦; traditional Chinese: 張凱夢; pinyin: Zhāng Kǎimèng; Wade–Giles: Chang 1 K'ai 3-meng 4) was a 30 year old female Hongkonger who was executed in Singapore after being charged and found guilty with smuggling over 4 kg of diamorphine into the country.
The site of the prison was formerly a British Forces base called Lo Wu Camp, which was later used to accommodate Vietnamese refugees. [1] [2] To help alleviate prison overcrowding, the military base was converted into the minimum-security Lo Wu Correctional Institution, which upon completion in August 1997 had a capacity of 208.
In 2002, 1,096 new prisoners; in 2003, 1,636 new prisoners. It has 4,000 prisoners, 40,000 juveniles in 50 years. It moved to Shijing in 1958. Provincial Women's Prison: Baiyun District, Guangzhou: Zhuliao: 2003: Detains nearly 5,000 prisoners. More than 4,000 prisoners were moved there from Shaoguan Prison on 6 February 2003 Qingyuan Prison
According to the International Centre for Prison Studies, as of August 2014, the Chinese women's prison population is the second-largest in the world (after the United States) with 84,600 female prisoners in total or 5.1% of the overall Chinese prison population. [2] [35]