The Penghu Refugee Camp was administered by the
Penghu Defense Command.
Siyu Chuwan Camp The first refugee camp in Penghu was established in 1977 at Chuwan (
pinyin: Zhuwan, Chinese: 竹篙灣, Taiwanese: Tik-ko-uan),
Siyu Township, using a borrowed ROC Army base as the "Temporary Reception Center for Vietnamese Refugees". The Chuwan center closed around 1979, having operated for only a short period, and was therefore not widely known.
Baisha Chiangmei Camp . The address: No. 141-2, Chiangmei Village, Baisha Township, Penghu County, Taiwan. Chiangmei Camp (also spelt as Jiangmei via pinyin, Chinese:講美, Taiwanese: Káng-bí), this refugee camp was also converted from former military barracks, and its formal name was the "
Chinese Association for Relief and Ensuing Services (CARES)". As the number of refugees housed in Siyu gradually increased, the Siyu facility became insufficient. On 1 December 1978, a refugee camp in Chiangmei Village,
Baisha Township, officially began operation, primarily accommodating Vietnamese refugees under the "Boat People Project". On 15 November 1988, the Chiangmei Village camp was closed, having operated for a total of 11 years. Over that period, it received 45 groups comprising 2,098 people. The refugees were broadly categorized as "ethnic Chinese from South Vietnam", "ethnic Chinese from North Vietnam", and "Vietnamese (
Kinh people)", with most of the ethnic Chinese refugees originating from
Guangdong Province. Approximately 100 children were born at the camp. The camp was located at No. 141-2, Chiangmei Village, Baisha Township, Penghu County, near
Chiangmei Elementary School. It is said that a few "anti-communist volunteers" who had escaped from Mainland China also stayed there. The remains of the refugee camp were completely demolished in April 2003.
Military Announcement On 10 March 2003, shortly before the demolition of the Chiangmei Camp, journalist Asio Liu Chihsiung (劉吉雄), Liu Yu-ching (劉禹慶), and Chuang Hui-hui (莊惠惠) discovered a military notice titled "History of the Refugee Camp" inside the base. The contents are quoted as follows: Translation of the following Chinese text: On 16 June 1977, the first two groups of Vietnamese refugees successively drifted into the waters off Taitung Siaoliuqiu. At the time, there was no suitable organization to handle the matter, so the
Chinese Association for Relief and Ensuing Services (CARES) established the "Temporary Reception Center for Vietnamese Refugees" at the Chiguang Military Camp (繼光營區) in Siyu Township, Penghu County — the predecessor of what would later become the "Reception Center". As the number of rescued drifting refugees steadily increased and operations grew more complex, on 1 December 1978, the government entrusted the CARES to establish the "Reception Center for Refugees from the Indochinese Peninsula, Chinese Continental Disaster Relief Association", borrowing a military camp in Baisha Township to serve as a refugee camp and expand capacity. Upholding
Chairman Ku's principle of "providing proper care for refugees", and under the supervision and support of the Commander of the Penghu Defense Command and the Director of its Political Warfare Department, the Center formulated comprehensive operational procedures and plans, allowing all aspects of its work to proceed in an orderly manner. This is the history of the Center. The fall of Vietnam and the plight of its displaced refugees serve as a lesson from which we must learn. We must recognize that anti-communism and national salvation are two sides of the same coin — without opposing communism, there can be no saving the nation; to save the nation, one must first oppose communism. Journalist Asio Liu Chihsiung said, the notice contains an error: "Taitung Siaoliuqiu" should in fact read "
Pingtung Siaoliuqiu". == Huỳnh Cẩn Du ==