The Phnom Penh Post

Jail alternativ­e possible

- Niem Chheng

AMINISTRY of Justice official appeared to revive the possibilit­y of an alternativ­e sentencing program that would reduce overcrowdi­ng in prisons by assigning smalltime offenders to community service.

Ministry of Justice spokesman Chin Malin, who spoke to reporters briefly after a closeddoor meeting with the UN’s interim human rights representa­tive Simon Walker on Friday, said the ministry needs time to study the concept further.

“We don’t want to put [of- fenders] in jail, which would be a waste of the skills and knowledge they have and make the prison crowded,” Malin said.

In a message yesterday, Walker directed questions about the program to the ministry.

UN Special Rapporteur Rhona Smith first pitched the idea during her fact-finding mission in August, to praise from civil society organisati­ons. The Ministry of Justice proposed a pilot in Battambang province but backtracke­d after a senior Justice Ministry official challenged the idea in September due to concerns that the public would assume suspects had been released due to cor- ruption and take matters into their own hands.

Malin confirmed yesterday that the ministry is still open to the idea, but only for convicted offenders, not those in pre-trial detention.

“They are not freed,” Malin said. “They are still under the surveillan­ce of the authority of the court.”

Nuth Savna, deputy chief of the General Department of Prisons, said he would welcome the pilot project and that it would help reduce prison overcrowdi­ng. Cambodia currently has about 30,000 prisoners and detainees, according to Savna.

 ?? FACEBOOK ?? Justice Ministry spokesman Chin Malin speaks to the press on Friday.
FACEBOOK Justice Ministry spokesman Chin Malin speaks to the press on Friday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia