A police force has been serving
Hong Kong since shortly after the island was established as a colony in 1841. On 30 April 1841, 12 weeks after the
British landed in Hong Kong, Captain
Charles Elliot established a policing authority in the new colony, empowering Captain
William Caine to enforce
Qing law in respect of local inhabitants and "British Police Law" for "non-natives". By October 1842, an organised police force (still under the direction of Caine who was also Chief Magistrate) was routinely bringing criminals before the courts for trial. During World War II,
Japan occupied Hong Kong, and the Hong Kong Police Force was temporarily disbanded. Policing duties were assumed by the Japanese
Kempeitai, with Chinese officers being forced to serve alongside and officers of other ethnicities sent to
Stanley Prison. Some local Chinese were also recruited as police officers, which the force retained after the
liberation of Hong Kong from Japan and were given the letter designation of "J". Officers served pre-war were also reinstated into the force. The 1950s saw the commencement of Hong Kong's 40-year rise to global prominence, during which time the Hong Kong Police tackled many issues that have challenged Hong Kong's stability. Between
1949 and
1989, Hong Kong experienced several huge waves of immigration from
mainland China, most notably
1958–62. In the 1970s and 1980s, large numbers of
Vietnamese boat people arrived in Hong Kong, posing challenges first for marine police, secondly for officers who were posted in the dozens of camps in the territory and lastly for those who had to repatriate them. The force was granted the use of the title ‘royal’ in 1969 for its handling of the
Hong Kong 1967 riots — renaming it the
Royal Hong Kong Police Force. In 1974, the
Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC) was created to give government wide-ranging powers to investigate corruption. At the turn of the 1980s, the Hong Kong Police Force began marketing itself as "Asia's Finest". The recruitment of
Europeans to the force ceased in 1994, and in 1995 the Royal Hong Kong Police took responsibility for patrolling the boundary with China. Prior to 1995, the
British Army had operated the border patrol. The force played a prominent role in the process of the
handover of sovereignty in 1997 and continues to perform ceremonial flag-raising on each anniversary. With the handover of sovereignty, the police force dropped the prefix "Royal" from its name. In the 2010s, the police force played a prominent role in relation to the
2014 Hong Kong protests and
2019–20 Hong Kong protests. Following
Chris Tang's appointment as the
Commissioner of Police in November 2019, the police force changed its motto from "We serve with pride and care", which had been used for more than 20 years, to "Serving Hong Kong with honour, duty and loyalty."
The Economist suggested that this change would curry favour with the
central government of China. In July 2022, as part of a process to remove colonial aspects from the force,
foot drills changed from British style to Chinese
People's Liberation Army style with a
goose step. The language spoken during drills changed from English to Chinese, and junior officers stopped addressing higher-ranking officers with "Yes Sir".
Controversies During the 1940s, the HKPF faced a number of
corruption scandals involving officers. During the 1950s and 1960s, the force struggled with corruption issues relating to bribes from
syndicated drugs and
illegal gambling operations. Police corruption again emerged as a major concern in the early 1970s when the Commissioner ordered investigations to break the culture of corruption, causing forty-odd officers to flee Hong Kong with more than HK$80 million cash (about HK$2 million each). More recently, the Hong Kong Police Force has faced
extensive allegations of misconduct during the 2019 protests including excessive force, brutality, torture, and falsified evidence. In particular, the police were criticised for their failure to respond during the
mob attack at the Yuen Long MTR station in July 2019. Several lawsuits were filed in October 2019 against the HKPF for failure to show identification during protests. In May 2023, the HKPF recommended that schools install CCTV cameras in school classrooms to enhance security. From 2019 to 2022, 24 to 42 police officers were arrested per year. ==Organisation and structure==