Changi Prison

Changi Prison (Chinese: 樟宜监狱; Malay: Penjara Changi; Tamil: சாங்கி சிறைச்சாலை) was a prison located in Changi in the eastern part of Singapore. It has since been relocated as Changi Prison Complex and Changi Women's Prison and Drug Rehabilitation Centre.

History

First Prison and POW Camp

Changi Prison was constructed by the British administration of the Straits Settlements as a civilian prison, in 1936.

During World War II, following the Fall of Singapore in February 1942, the Japanese military detained about 3,000 civilians in Changi Prison, which was built to house only 600 prisoners. The Japanese used the British Army's Selarang Barracks, near the prison, as a prisoner of war camp, holding some 50,000 Allied soldiers, predominantly British and Australian; and from 1943, Dutch civilians brought over by the Japanese from the islands in the Dutch East Indies (now Indonesia).POWs were in fact rarely, if ever, held in the civilian prison. Nevertheless, in the UK, Australia, The Netherlands and elsewhere, the name "Changi" became synonymous with the infamous POW camp nearby.

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War Paint – Women at War review – female conflict artists get their moment in the spotlight

The Observer 24 Mar 2025
That goes for photographer Lee Miller (to a certain extent), as well as avant garde woodcarver and painter Rachel Reckitt, and prisoners of war interred in the Changi prison camp in Singapore by the ...
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