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Stanley: It was tough for the colonial convicts

Images of harsh punishment for prisoners, on display at a museum, stand in stark contrast to the relaxed modern lifestyle in Stanley

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Lee Yuk-lun offers expertise at the Correctional Services Museum. Photo: Dickson Lee

The room went silent as the cane came down with a sharp crack on a hard wooden surface. That's what used to happen to prisoners in Hong Kong's jails, said a museum guide to a fascinated group of pupils. He had their full attention.

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"This is not the way your mum and dad would hit you," Fan Hin-man said with a chuckle, to about 20 Form Two pupils from S.K.H. Lam Kau Mow Secondary School, Sha Tin.

They were in the punishment and imprisonment room of the Hong Kong Correctional Services Museum in Stanley. Fan delivered another hard smack, hitting a wooden contraption that resembled a medieval torture device.

Around the youngsters, framed pictures of prisoners being punished hung on the walls. Decades-old black and white images showed pirates, bandits and thieves in colonial Hong Kong. Some are shown being paraded in public, their crimes written on blocks of wood around their necks for all to see.

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Inmates work on shoes at a workshop in Stanley Prison in 1991. Photo: SCMP
Inmates work on shoes at a workshop in Stanley Prison in 1991. Photo: SCMP
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