Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

DEVIL’S ISLAND

FRENCH PENAL SETTLEMENT “PLACE OF AWFUL HORROR” NEWSPAPER WRITER'S APPEAL TO HUMANITY Pres* Association—By Telegraph—Copyright. LONDON, November 29. “In tbe name of humanity, should this hoyror go on?” asks a writer in the ‘ Daily Express,’ consequent on the announcement that the cages on the French convict ship Lamartiniere are again being filled up with human cargo for transportation to Devil’s Island. “Such barbarism still lingersin France, despite the abolition of public executions and its claim that Paris is a city of light.” The Avriter describes the boiling steam pipes which encircle the cages and are turned on in the event of unrest on board. The ship’s average quota is 600. Many have been carried ashore at the destination half dead from the hardships of the voyage. The writer estimates that an average of 36 a mouth are dying in hospitals on the island, or nearly 60 per cent, of the annual arrivals. “I have, spent a night in the hospital in Devil’s. Island with a convict holding his head in his hands* and sobbing his heart out. Words cannot depict the awful horror of the place. There is a look in the eyes of the convicts which I cannot eradicate from my mind. Their very souls seem to start from their eyes, crying to humanity for * mercy.. I walked through with the governor, wlien the majority of the convicts lowered their eyes. Here and there a convict bared his teeth and snarled behind the governor’s, back. Had he made any other move ho would have been taken back to the cells for punishment, or sent to work in the forests, bootless and sockless. I have seen men who have fallen at work lying on the ground .shaking from head to foot with fever, begging for aid which never comes. Even when they have finished their sentences they are unable to leave the island, because there is a tacit understanding with the civilian population that no ex-convict is to be allowed to earn enough money to take him back to France.” The writer concludes: “This is 1930 and still this monstrous thing goes on. The French are brave, chivalrous people. What is the explanation? [They live in their own fair land, which is flowing with milk and honey, and they do not know what is happening in the colonies.” ■

This article text was automatically generated and may include errors. View the full page to see article in its original form.
Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ESD19301201.2.67

Bibliographic details

Evening Star, Issue 20655, 1 December 1930, Page 10

Word Count
390

DEVIL’S ISLAND Evening Star, Issue 20655, 1 December 1930, Page 10

DEVIL’S ISLAND Evening Star, Issue 20655, 1 December 1930, Page 10