‘Why can’t I spend time with mum in prison?’ Hong Kong children need to bond with prisoner parents, experts urge

Lee was a toddler when he was left in his grandfather’s care, and wondered about his mother’s disappearances. By the time he started primary school, he wanted to know more.

“I asked my grandfather, but he told me to mind my own business as I was too young. Grandfather also said something like, mum did some bad things,” he recalled.

With help, mother and child were able to reconnect and resume living together after Lam left a rehabilitation centre in 2016.

A social worker and academic told the Post that honest communication was crucial in maintaining healthy ties between inmates and their children.

They also urged Hong Kong’s Correctional Services Department to raise the age limit for children allowed to spend time with their incarcerated mothers under a short-term residential visit programme.

Kimmy Chiu Sze-man, a social worker in charge of the Blue Bus Jockey Club Together We Grow Project, said young children often felt insecure when a parent was suddenly absent, but other family members could be reluctant to explain what happened.

“They use different stories to cover up the matter, because the family members themselves cannot sit with the fact that one of their kin is in jail,” she said.

Her programme provides support to children and youth whose parents have been arrested or imprisoned, or are ex-offenders, and also their carers.

It is currently helping about 200 families, about half of whom have children who visit incarcerated family members.

Eric Chui Wing-hong, professor of criminology at Polytechnic University, said keeping children in the dark about the reasons for their parents’ absence could make it harder to rebuild a relationship after the parent returned to society.

“Secrecy actually brings more trauma,” he said, adding that there were big adjustments to make when parents and children had not seen each other for a long time.

Professor Eric Chui of Polytechnic University warns that keeping secrets about an imprisoned parent can led to more trauma. Photo: Edmond So

Lee visited his mother once during her first time in jail, but he can only remember the security checks. His mother recalled him asking why she was in yellow prison garb.

It helped that as the boy grew up, he began researching how his mother landed in jail and a rehabilitation centre, going online to learn about drug addiction and what she was going through.

“I saw that when a person tries to get off drugs, they will really want to take it, and it is tough,” Lee recalled. “I then thought that she had gone to a rehabilitation centre to quit drugs for me, and that made me quite happy.”

Lam said her son’s well-being became her chief motivation to stay clean after undergoing a year-long addiction treatment.

She did her best to get to know her son, remembering his favourite characters and learning to play video games to get closer to him.

Lam, who has a younger child, a six-year-old girl, said she was grateful that neighbours who knew her story accepted her without judgment.

“Thanks to my son, who’s well-loved in the neighbourhood, I know I cannot get into trouble again. I always think to myself that I need to stop being a shame [to the family],” she said.

Lam is now a project assistant at the Society for Rehabilitation and Crime Prevention, sharing her experience to help others with family members who are incarcerated or pending the outcome of a criminal trial.

Social worker Chiu and criminologist Chui both said family visits and ongoing relationships helped to strengthen inmates’ motivation to change for the better and let the children know the absent parent was still there for them.

Inmates who expressed regret for their past actions often mentioned feeling sorry to their family, Chui said.

Currently, the Correctional Services Department allows convicted inmates to have two 30-minute social visits a month from family and friends, while those on remand can have one 15-minute visit each day.

A department spokesman said four new facilities in urban areas also allowed inmates and their families to meet over video.

Last year, the Hei Ling Chau Addiction Treatment Centre, Tong Fuk Correctional Institution and Stanley Prison started parent-child centres for male inmates to interact face-to-face with their children below the age of 11. The city’s two female prisons also have this arrangement.

Since last year too, prison authorities have piloted a scheme to allow children under three to stay with their incarcerated mothers for a week during the Lunar New Year, Easter and Christmas holidays.

Tong Fuk Correctional Institution is among those introducing parent-child centres for male inmates to interact face-to-face with their children below the age of 11. Photo: Handout

Chiu and Chui welcomed these changes, saying face-to-face visits and activities strengthened the parent-child bond and also prepared inmates to return to their families after release.

“During a short residential visit from five to seven days, the mother has to take up her role as a carer to the child, instead of just playing with them. She needs to learn whether she can take care of her child, and the child also learns to get along with the mother,” Chiu said.

Both hoped the authorities would raise the age limit of children allowed to stay with their mothers during major festivals.

“If it could be raised to six years old, more children could benefit,” criminologist Chui said.

A Correctional Services Department spokesman told the Post it provided “appropriate rehabilitation programmes” to prisoners with different needs to help their reintegration into society.

Source link

Visited 1 times, 1 visit(s) today

Related Article

Nvidia’s trillion-dollar run puts pressure on the bulls

BEIJING, CHINA – MAY 14: Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang (C) gestures as he prepares to depart following a welcome ceremony at the Great Hall of the People on May 14, 2026 in Beijing, China. President Trump is meeting with President Xi Jinping in Beijing to address the Iran conflict, trade imbalances, and the Taiwan situation

Permutations in Europe: What’s still at stake in final weeks of season?

There’s still plenty to play for across Europe as we head into the final matches of the club season. Here are all the title races, Champions League fights, and relegation battles left to be decided in the top leagues this month. This story will be updated until the end of the campaign. 👉 Jump to:EPL

Brewing a Better Half-Gallon Batch

Today I finally ran an experiment I’ve wanted to try for a long time. If you’re a professional barista—or you run a busy café—this may save you some time. Most coffee shops use 1–1.5 gallon batch brewers (Bunn, Curtis, Fetco, etc.). When I opened Short Sleeves Coffee, I intentionally avoided brewing full 1-gallon batches. I

5 Frozen Breakfasts Chefs Say Keep You Full All Morning

Chef-approved frozen breakfasts with more protein and better ingredients. Eating a healthy breakfast every morning is a great way to start the day, but most people don’t have time to cook. Whether you’re rushing out the door in the morning for work, taking the kids to school or both, there’s usually not much time in

CA scales back plan to ban student use of cell phones

By Carolyn Jones, CalMatters This story was originally published by CalMatters. Sign up for their newsletters. Until last month, California was poised to join nearly a dozen other states that ban cell phones in K-12 schools. But under pressure from school boards and administrators, lawmakers scaled back a bill that would have required such a

BulkQuant Launches AI Trading Bot for Crypto, Forex, and Stock Markets

BulkQuant Launches AI Trading Bot for Crypto, Forex, and Stock Markets

London, United Kingdom, May 15, 2026 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — BulkQuant has officially launched its AI trading bot platform designed for crypto, forex, and stock market traders seeking a simpler way to automate trading strategies across multiple financial markets. The platform combines AI-powered quantitative analysis, automated trade execution, portfolio monitoring, and adaptive risk management into a

IMF lauds resilient Hong Kong economy but warns of risks linked to Middle East war

IMF lauds resilient Hong Kong economy but warns of risks linked to Middle East war

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has lauded the resilience of Hong Kong’s economy, noting a sustained recovery despite economic activity having yet to return to pre-Covid levels, while warning of downside risks stemming from escalating geopolitical tensions. It also urged Hong Kong to pursue medium-term financial reforms, including the introduction of a goods and services

Smithsonian Presidents Exhibit Reopens With Low-Key Trump Impeachment Mention

For the past year, the Smithsonian Institution has found itself in the awkward position of telling the nation’s story while being supported in part by a government that wants to narrow how that story is told. In December, the White House threatened to revoke funding to the institution if it did not hand over a

Marvel’s Daredevil Follow-up Is Already Dominating on Streaming

A follow-up to Daredevil: Born Again Season 2 on Disney+ has become a massive streaming success within days of its launch. The Punisher: One Last Kill has quickly climbed to the top of multiple charts, beating out other titles on the platform. The MCU television special follows the gun-toting vigilante, who finds himself targeted by

Is Now a Bad Time to Invest?

The market has been on a roll lately, with the S&P 500 (SNPINDEX: ^GSPC) setting new highs throughout May. If you think you missed your opportunity when the market bottomed in late March, don’t fret. The market hitting new all-time highs is not particularly rare and should not change your investment strategy. And if you

6 bids for Hong Kong land sale signal renewed confidence despite market caution

6 bids for Hong Kong land sale signal renewed confidence despite market caution

The Hong Kong government’s first land sale in the current financial year has drawn six bids, according to the Development Bureau, including those from the city’s largest developers, suggesting a more confident outlook for the residential property market. At the close of tender for Tung Chung Town Lot No 54 at Area 106A on Friday

Each Premier League team reranked: Man City rise; Chelsea, Liverpool collapse

Ryan O’Hanlon Close Ryan O’Hanlon ESPN.com writer Ryan O’Hanlon is a staff writer for ESPN.com. He’s also the author of “Net Gains: Inside the Beautiful Game’s Analytics Revolution.”  and  Bill Connelly Close Bill Connelly ESPN Staff Writer Bill Connelly is a writer for ESPN. He covers college football, soccer and tennis. He has been at

Trump departs China after two-day summit

Trump departs China after two-day summit

IE 11 is not supported. For an optimal experience visit our site on another browser. Trump Wraps China Summit With Xi Jinping: What Are the Results? 05:41 Xi gives Trump rare tour of secret garden at heart of Chinese government 01:04 Now Playing Trump departs China after two-day summit 01:01 UP NEXT Special Report: Trump

Carol Chow was facing a bankruptcy petition by five people over unspecified debts at the time of her death. Photo: Dickson Lee

Embattled Hong Kong developer sued for HK$130 million, days after founder’s death

A Hong Kong property developer has been sued for HK$130 million (US$16.6 million) over allegedly breaching guarantor obligations in two bond subscription agreements, becoming the latest lawsuit to implicate the embattled company and following its founder’s sudden death earlier this week. Lofter Group, known for its urban renewal projects across the city’s core districts, and

Trump’s China visit left chip export issue unresolved

This report is from this week’s The Tech Download newsletter. Like what you see? You can subscribe here. One look at the roster of U.S. execs that cozied up to U.S. President Donald Trump on the 20+ hours flight from Alaska to China on Wednesday and you get a sense of the American delegation’s key focus

Why the Cerebras IPO matters for the AI race with China

Why the Cerebras IPO matters for the AI race with China

Cerebras, an AI chipmaker, saw its shares nearly double on Nasdaq, closing up 70% with a $95B market cap. Cerebras’s powerful chips are key in the US-China AI tech race. Chris Buskirk, co-founder and chief investment officer of 1789 Capital, a key Cerebras investor, says the company’s IPO is geopolitically significant. On Thursday, shares of

Fitbit Air vs Whoop Strap Comparison: Price, Features and AI

The Google Fitbit Air is very much the talk of the fitness tracking town right now, not only because it’s the first new Fitbit device that we’ve had in years, but it’s also one of the first big brands to go head-to-head with the established Whoop Strap (if you don’t count the Polar Loop and

0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x