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Colonialism and Compromise: The Shanghai Municipal Police and the Arrest of Communists, 1927–37

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 March 2021

PETER KWOK-FAI LAW*
Affiliation:
Institute of Modern History, Academia Sinica632879@alumni.soas.ac.uk

Abstract

The Shanghai Municipal Council (SMC), which was mainly controlled by British residents in the treaty port of Shanghai, and protected by the British Foreign Office, came under serious challenge from the Guomindang (GMD) (the rising Nationalist Party of China) from 1927 onwards. The Shanghai Municipal Police (SMP)—an imperial police force with powers to arrest, prosecute and detain—was forced to collaborate with the GMD, and practice unlawful arrest, extradition and re-indoctrination of Communist suspects and convicts. This resulted in the erosion of state powers and the management of prisons. This article argues that the dismantling of British colonialism began to take place in Shanghai during the inter-war period at the expense of some English legal conventions, as demonstrated by SMP violations of existing legal practices and humanitarian commitments. Second, it also suggests that English judicial conventions had an unintended impact on some Chinese civilians, who were keen to safeguard their rights during their detention and trial in and beyond the Shanghai Legation. This article, therefore, offers a new periodisation of British decolonisation and a re-examination of colonial legacy in East Asia.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of The Royal Asiatic Society

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Footnotes

This article was adapted from an MPhil dissertation submitted to Lingnan University in Hong Kong in 2015. The author wishes to thank Prof. Robert Bickers, Dr Lars Laamann, Dr Mark Hampton, Dr Shuk-wah Poon, Dr Catherine Ladds, Dr Huei-min Sun, Dr James Fellows, Dr Simon Case, Mr Ho-shing To for their valuable advice and guidance.

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46 Ibid.

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48 Inspector W. H. Widdowson, Police Guide and Regulations (Shanghai, 1938), pp. 171–175, 466–469; R. Bickers, Empire Made Me: An Englishman Adrift in Shanghai (London, 2003), p. 65. The SMP modelled itself on London's Metropolitan Police in the drafting of its practices and its structure.

49 ‘Interview with Dr von Kiebtner on 30 December 1929’, “Shanghai gonggong zujie gongbuju zongbanchu youguan jingwu chu guanyu kelai na boshi fabiao guanyu guomin dang zhengfu he Jiang Jieshi dui Shanghai zujie taidu de tanhua de baogao, 1929–30” [A report prepared by the SMP concerning Dr Kiebtner's comments on the attitude of the Nationalist Government and Chiang Kai-shek towards the International Settlement, 1929–30], pp. 1–3, U1-6-22, Secretariat Files of the SMC, Shanghai Municipal Archives [SMA]. Unlike their Chinese counterparts, the SMP had no power to punish, arrest and detain a man on the basis of mere suspicion, disregarding whether a charge had been made against the man.

50 Widdowson, Police Guide and Regulations, p. 466.

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55 Widdowson, Police Guide and Regulations, p. 466; Musso, The Mixed Court at Shanghai, pp. 1–5, SOAS library.

56 A. K. R. Kiralfy, The English Legal System (London, 1990), pp. 140.

57 Musso, The Mixed Court at Shanghai, pp. 1–5, SOAS library.

58 ‘Arrest of Hu Cheh-chiao, alleged Communist & Chinese dispatch warrants - Commissioner of Police (1927), 5 July 1927’, “Shanghai gonggong zujie zongbanchu guanyu gongchan dangyuan de yindu wenti 1927–8”, [The controversy concerning the extradition of Communists, 1927–8], U1-3-3313, Secretariat Files of the SMC, SMA.

59 SMP, Police Daily Reports, U1-1-1155, (Shanghai, 1927), p. 251, SMA; Xu E. C., Wo he gongdang zhandou de huiyi [My struggle with the Communists] (Taipei, 1953), p. 189.

60 ‘Deputy Commissioner (Crime), Execution of warrants’, “The Dah Doong Printing Shop No. F.A. 612 Yu Yuen Road. Copy of court proceedings - sheet No. 6 Re Mr. T. S. Lea appeared for the police”, D2754, SMP Special Branch Files, RG 263, NARA, Washington D. C.

61 Widdowson, Police Guide and Regulations, p. 466; Kiralfy, The English Legal System, pp. 141–142. In spite of the importance of the police's obligation to protect the public, police constables are lawfully given wider powers of arrest only when someone is suspected of being about to commit a crime, or having committed an offence serious enough to warrant arrest such as possession of offensive weapons, or offences carrying a minimum of a five-year sentence.

62 “Youguan Gu Shunzhang deng po'an jingguo” [The report concerning the arrest of Gu Shunzhang and his colleagues], 276/7435. (A primary material held at the library of the Ministry of Justice Investigation Bureau in Xindian, Taipei).

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72 Shenbao, 11 November 1932.

73 Widdowson, Police Guide and Regulations, p. 467; A. Kotenev, Shanghai: Its Mixed Court and Council: Materials Relating to the History of the Shanghai Municipal Council and the History, Practice and Statistics of the International Mixed Court, Chinese Modern Law and Shanghai Municipal Land Regulations and Bye-laws Governing the Life in the Settlement (Shanghai, 1925), p. 325.

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82 Ibid., 10 July 1936.

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85 Ibid., pp. 1–5.

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88 A. Kotenev, Shanghai: Its Mixed Court, pp. 239–240. According to Anatol Kotenev (a Russian interpreter of the former Mixed Court), “the Court's jurisdiction was localised strictly to a Treaty territory, which in its very substance was neutral as a portion of land set aside for the residence of foreign merchants, peaceful traders, but not politicians and belligerents”.

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91 Kotenev, Shanghai: Its Mixed Court, p. 240; ‘Suggest re charges in rendition agreement in Chinese courts in the settlement and French Concession, 1929’, “Chinese courts in the settlement and French Concession”, I.O. 7245, SMP Special Branch Files, RG 263, NARA, Washington D. C.

92 ‘Letter written to E. S. Fessenden by E. I. M. Barret on 16 November 1928’, “Shanghai gonggong zujie zongbanchu guanyu gongchan dangyuan de yindu wenti”, 1927–8, SMA; Kotenev, Shanghai: Its Mixed Court, p. 241.

93 ‘Dispatch written to Under-Secretary of State for the Colonies William Ormsby-Gore by from Commissioner of Weihaiwei Reginald Johnston, 17 December 1927’, “Extradition of Communists from Weihaiwei”, FO 228/3908, TNA, Kew.

94 Shenbao, 12 September 1933.

95 Ibid., 19 September 1933.

96 Ibid., 18 June 1935.

97 Feetham, Report of the Hon. Richard Feetham, pp. 186–189.

98 SMP, Police Daily Reports, U1-1-1155, p. 176, SMA; Feetham, Report of the Hon. Richard Feetham, pp. 190–191.

99 ‘Letter written from E. I. M. Barret to Acting Secretary of the SMC on 21 November 1928’, “Shanghai gonggong zujie zongbanchu guanyu gongchan dangyuan de yindu wenti”, 1927–8, SMA.

100 Ibid.

101 ‘Chinese courts in the settlement and French Concession, 1929’, “Chinese courts in the settlement and French Concession”, NARA.

102 Ibid.

103 ‘Letter written from Commissioner of Police R. M. J. Martin to officers i/c Police Stations, 27 March 1931’, “Assistance to SPSB to arrest two suspected Communists. Tsang Ong Lai, Au Sai Ts”, D4745, SMP Special Branch Files, RG 263, NARA, Washington D. C. It was said that when a Communist is arrested, the policemen had to report the case without delay to the Special Branch. In the event of any doubt as to subsequent procedure, the matter would be referred to the Divisional Officer or to the officer who was in charge of the Special Branch.

104 J. Fellows, ‘Colonial autonomy and Cold War diplomacy: Hong Kong and the case of Anthony Grey, 1967–9’, Historical Research 89 (2016), pp. 567–587.

105 Bickers, Britain in China, p. 115.

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108 According to the definition of Commissioner Barrett, this man should be classified as a bona fide resident as he had been resided at the Settlement for more than six months at that time.

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118 Ibid., pp. 70–71.

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131 Ibid.

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134 Ibid.

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137 Ibid.

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139 L. Fraser, ‘Report on military attaché's recent tour to Nanjing and the South’, “Military Attache's tour of South China”, 1 August 1935, FO 371/19289, TNA, Kew.

140 Shenbao, 18 December 1932; ibid., 7 April 1933.

141 Ibid., 5 February 1933; ibid., 5 April 1933.

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143 Bickers, Britain in China, pp. 15–19.

144 Bickers, Empire Made Me, pp. 185-186. Bickers leaves the treatment of Chinese reactionaries largely untouched when he briefly elucidates how the SMP's prosecution powers in the mid-1920s were challenged by fervid Chinese nationalism in armed and violent cases, as well as in relation to offences connected to labour unrest.

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