Alan John CarterCBEISOJP (Chinese: 賈達德; 5 August 1929 – 1 April 2016) was a British and Hong Kong immigration official. He was the Director of Immigration of Hong Kong from 1983 to 1989, being the last expatriate to hold the office. He died in April 2016 at the age of 86.[1]
In 1966, he was posted to Hong Kong, then a British crown colony, as a Principal Immigration Inspector and was subsequently promoted to the ranks of Assistant Director and Deputy Director of the Immigration Department in 1971 and 1978 respectively. Before becoming Director in 1983, he had been responsible for tackling the influx of illegal immigrants from the mainland China as well as the influx of Vietnamese boatpeople. He assisted in implementing the "immediate repatriation upon arrest" policy in 1980.
In the early 1987, one of the accommodated Vietnamese refugee boats in Hong Kong received the supply of Immigration Department to voluntarily depart and continue sailing. It arrived in Kinmen to apply for asylum, but was rejected and slaughtered by the Republic of China Army on 7 March, then the boat was burnt to destroy the evidence. The documents signed by Director Carter for the Vietnamese captain on 12 December 1986, and for the passenger refugees on 12 January 1987 were also hidden, along with other English and French evidence from Singapore and Vietnam, during the later court martial process after being exposed by media. The ROC Ministry of National Defense repeatedly denied on the journalists' reportages and the parliament questioning in June, until being uncovered by the publication of GeneralHau Pei-tsun's diary in 2000 and by the follow-up Control Yuan report in 2022, known as the Lieyu Massacre。[2][3][4]
^Guan, Ren-jian (1 September 2011). 你不知道的台灣 國軍故事 [The Taiwan you don't know: Stories of ROC Arm Forces] (in Chinese (Taiwan)). Taipei: Puomo Digital Publishing. ISBN9789576636493. Retrieved 20 October 2022.
^Gao, Yong-cheng (13 July 2022). "111司調0025 調查報告" [2022 Justice Investigation Report No. 0025] (in Chinese (Taiwan)). Taipei: Control Yuan. Retrieved 7 August 2022.