Times of Eswatini

Mapisa-Nqakula’s bail plea ● Prison means uninvited sex, diseases, drugs, violence and gangs

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JOHANNESSB­URG – The embattled former Speaker Nosiviwe Mapisa-Nqakula, who has spent 24 years in government, on Thursday expressed little faith in the country’s prisons, and instead begged the Pretoria Magistrate­s Court to keep her out of jail.

In her affidavit, where she requested that she be granted bail, she listed a number of reasons why prison would be unsuitable for her, saying they were riddled with violence and were unhygienic. She said sending her to a prison cell would be a “cruel punishment”.

Mapisa-Nqakula faces 12 counts of corruption and one count of money laundering for allegedly receiving kickbacks valued at more than R2 million for a contract when she was defence minister. Through an affidavit read by her lawyer Graham Kerr-Phillips, the former speaker slammed the prisons as she motivated why she should be kept free pending her trial.

She said there were ‘chronic failings’ in the prison system, such as the dramatic overcrowdi­ng of inmates, and prisons were subject to gang activity. “Assault by inmates as well as correction­al services officers is a constant threat. Membership of gangs is often predicated by the commission of an assault.

Failure

“Applying the concept of systemic failure, the South African prisons and juvenile facilities do not have facilities available to make provision for my safety and security. Activities of gangs are to organise uninvited sexual contact or facilitate drug trade. The chief targets of such are the old and the young.”

She said sanitation and ablution services in the prisons were “totally inadequate” and contribute­d to the spread of diseases. “Access to medical facilities is virtually non-existent due to the lack of resources and underemplo­yment. Recently, as a result of this problem, former President Jacob Zuma has been sent to a private medical facility and further has medical parole.”

Mapisa-Nqakula is on medication for hypertensi­on, the court heard. While South Africa’s prison facilities are known as the Department of Correction­al Services, Mapisa-Nqakula said the prisons did not rehabilita­te offenders as intended and that the basic right which permits inmates to exercise for one hour per day was ignored due to understaff­ing and overcrowdi­ng.

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