Hague Penitentiary Institution

The Hague Penitentiary Institution (Dutch: Penitentiaire Inrichting Haaglanden) is a Dutch prison that is part of the Judicial Institutions Department (Dienst Justitiële Inrichtingen, DJI) of the Ministry of Justice. It can accommodate more than 1,000 detainees and consists of two locations, at Zoetermeer and Scheveningen. The Zoetermeer location is for Systematic offenders and the Scheveningen location serves as a Penitentiary Psychiatric Center, the 'open design' Limited Secured Installation and Judicial Medical Center. A special independent unit in the Scheveningen location serves as a United Nations Detention Unit (UNDU) for international offenders where they remain in pre-trial detention under the responsibility of the United Nations like suspects of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) and of the International Criminal Court (ICC).

Logo of the Penitentiary Institution Haaglanden
The Penitentiary Institution Haaglanden's Scheveningen location.

Zoetermeer location

The Zoetermeer location of the Hague Penitentiary Institution was built in 1995 and is located in the Rokkenhage district in Zoetermeer, a city in the western Netherlands, in the province of South Holland. The penal institution in Zoetermeer is a detention center and an Institution for Systematic offenders (ISD). The device has capacity for nearly 400 detainees.

Scheveningen location

Main entrance to the Hague Penitentiary Institution at the Scheveningen location
Security area at the entrance at the Scheveningen location
Cell 601, the death cell during World War II

The Scheveningen location of the Hague Penitentiary Institution more popularly known as Scheveningen Prison is a famous prison in Belgisch Park (Dutch pronunciation: [ˈbɛlɣis pɑrk], literally Belgian Park), a neighbourhood in the Scheveningen district of The Hague, Netherlands. The penitentiary in the east section of Scheveningen is located at the road Pompstationsweg.

The complex Scheveningen includes a Penitentiary Psychiatric Center, Limited Secured Installation (also called 'open design') and the Justice Center for Somatic Care (formerly the Penitentiary Hospital or Judicial Medical Center).

United Nations Detention Unit

A special independently acting unit in the penitentiary's Scheveningen location hosts the United Nations Detention Unit (UNDU), a UN-administered jail as part of the facility. The UNDU was established in 1993 as part of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) and the ICC Detention Centre for the detention of people awaiting trial before the International Criminal Court. The penitentiary was picked as a trial location for the International Criminal Court, through the United Nations Security Council Resolution 1688 of 17 June 2006.[1]

Oranjehotel

The Scheveningen prison was built in 1919 to house minor criminals. During World War II the prison was confiscated by the Germans and renamed Polizeigefängnis, but was colloquially known as Oranjehotel.[2] More than 25,000 passed through the prison, the vast majority being Jews, resistance fighters, and political prisoners. Most went on to Germans prisons and concentration camps.[3] 215 prisoners were executed at the Waalsdorpervlakte, the dunes opposite the prison.[2]

The complex became a prison again after the liberation,[2] however cell 601, one of the cells for people condemned to death, remained in authentic condition.[4] The original buildings were decommissioned in 2009, and were designated a national monument in 2010,[3] however about two-thirds of the complex was torn down much to the dismay of the Oranjehotel Foundation.[2]

gollark: Oh, I see. We could put our computers into time accelerator chambers.
gollark: 18 months is much longer than 62 minutes, so I don't see the problem.
gollark: What? We obviously doubled (and still double) the performance every 62 minutes, not 18 months.
gollark: Not contemporary GTech™ 512-bit quaternary-quaternionic-posit processors?
gollark: And they will never have more than 48 bits used for addressing.

References

  1. United Nations Security Council resolution 1688 Archived September 9, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  2. "What about the Oranjehotel". Oranjehotel Foundation via Heijmans. Retrieved 14 June 2020.
  3. "Nationaal Monument Oranjehotel" (in Dutch). Retrieved 14 June 2020.
  4. "Scheveningen, 'Oranjehotel'". 4 en 5 mei (in Dutch). Retrieved 14 June 2020.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.