This is a list of prisons within Jiangxi province of the People's Republic of China.
Name | Enterprise name | City/County/District | Village/Town | Established | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Changbei Prison | Xinjian County, Nanchang | Changleng | 1953 | Inmates serve sentences of 15 years or more | |
Ganbin Prison | Zhugang Farm | Nanchang | 1964 | ||
Ganjiang Prison | Jiangxi Zhugang Farm | Xinjian County, Nanchang | 1961 | Jianwei brand rice is produced | |
Ganxi Prison | Jiangxi Xinmao Industrial Development Ltd. (Jiangxi Xinhua Coal Mine; Jiangxi Xinhua Cement Plant) | Gao'an | Bajing | 1958 | |
Ganzhou City Detention Center[1] | |||||
Ganzhou Prison | Ganzhou | Shuinan | |||
Hongcheng Prison | Clothing Factory; Wire-pulling Factory; Maidikang Medical Equipment Factory | Nanchang | 1962 | Inmates serving sentences of 10 years or more | |
Hongdu Prison | Chengxin Farm; Chengxin Industries Ltd. | Xinjian County, Nanchang | 1955 | ||
Jingde Prison | Jiangxi Funan Mine | Jingdezhen | 1956 | ||
Nanchang Prison | Guanghua Plastics Ltd.; Clothing Factory | ||||
Prov. Women's Prison | Nanchang Chemical Fiber Factory; Jiangxi Debaolu Industries Ltd. | Xinjian County, Nanchang | Changleng | 1958 | |
Raozhou Prison | Jiangxi Zhuhu Antibiotics Factory; Jiangxi Zhuhu Pharmaceutical Factory; Jiangxi Zhuhu MSG Factory; Weixin Farm | Poyang County | 1954 | In Zhuhushan, roughly 5,000 prisoners, largest prison in province | |
Wenzhen Prison | Xinjian County, Nanchang | Wenzhen | |||
Yuzhang Prison | Jiangxi Prov. Fire Engine Manufacturing Plant; Changzhou Farm | Xinjian County, Nanchang | Changleng | 1958 | Over 2,000 inmates, 90% serving commuted death sentences |
References
edit- ^ The Associated Press (June 6, 2017). "Lawyer: 3 Men Who Probed Ivanka Trump Shoemaker Detained". The New York Times.
A lawyer for one of three activists detained while investigating a Chinese company that produced shoes for Ivanka Trump and other brands in China said Tuesday that all three men were being held at the Ganzhou City Detention Center in southeastern China, where conditions were crowded but tolerable.
- "Laogai Handbook 2007-2008" (PDF) (in Chinese and English). Washington, D.C.: Laogai Research Foundation. October 2008. pp. 291–300. ISBN 978-1-931550-25-3. Retrieved 24 May 2017.