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Green Island, Taiwan

Green Island (Pinyin: Lǜ Dǎo) is a small volcanic island in the Pacific Ocean, about 33km (20.5 miles) off the western coast of Taiwan. The island is 15.092 km2 at high tide and 17.3292 at low tide. Administratively, Green Island is Lyudao Siang, a township of Taitung County and one of the county's two offshore areas (離島鄉; the other is Orchid Island). Green Island is the ROC's fourth largest island. It is accessible by airplane in eight to 12 minutes from Taitung City. There are also ferries capable of carrying over 250 passengers.

Prisons

The island is primarily noted as the place of past and current prisons and penal colonys. Green island first served as an isolated spot and place of exile for political prisoners during the martial law period of Taiwanese history during Kuomintang single-party rule (especially during the White Terror). After their release, many of the prisoners jailed from the late 1940s to the late 1980s during the period of martial law went on to establish the Democratic Progressive Party (including Bo Yang and Shih Ming-teh). The place where most of the political prisoners were held was the Green Island Lodge (Lǜ Dǎo Shānzhuāng), where conditions were horrible. Oasis Village was the main penal colony. The prison was later closed, but its interior is not open to the public. There is a current movement to restore the prison and preserve it as a museum.

The Green Island Prison (Lǜ Jiānyś) is also on the island and now houses some of Taiwan's most dangerous criminals and gangsters.

The island is the natural habitat for deer, goats, chameleons, giant bats, and coconut crabs as well as indigenous and migratory birds.

In 1995, less than half of the registered 2,634 residents of the island actually reside on the island. The population is dwindling due to difficulty to find jobs on the island. There are two preschools, one kindergarten, two elementary schools, and one middle school on the island. To pursue any education at or higher than the level of senior high school, the islanders must move to the main island of Taiwan. Public service centres include one seniors' home, one library, and one community centre.

It once belonged to the Amis Taiwanese aborigines, under the nae Sanasai. It was called "Fire-Burned Island (火燒島 Huǒshāo Dǎo; or, 火燒嶼 Huoshao Yu) before renamed to Green Island in August 1, 1949 by Huang Shih-hung (黃式鴻), the magistrate of Taitung at the time, who thought that the former name was unrefined.

The villages and the settlements (聚落) they administer are:

  • Zhongliao Village (中寮村)
    • Zhongliao
  • Nanliao Village (南寮村)
    • Nanliao (南寮)
    • Yugang (漁港)
  • Gongguan Village (公館村)
    • Gongguan (公館)
    • Chakou (柴口)
    • Liumagou (流麻溝)
    • Dahu (大湖)
    • Zuoping (左坪)

The following abandoned aboriginal tribal settlements also belong to Gongguan Village:

  • Youzihu (柚子湖)
  • Nanzihu (楠子湖)
  • Haicanping (海參坪)
  • Dabaisha (大白沙)

See also

External link



10-09-2007 15:17:32
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