Stabroek News Sunday

Work to house 180 more prisoners at Camp St jail resumes

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Reconstruc­tion at the Camp Street prison recently recommence­d, months after it was stopped due to the new Coronaviru­s disease (COVID-19) outbreak and upon completion it will accommodat­e one hundred and eighty inmates.

Speaking to Sunday Stabroek yesterday, Director of Prisons Gladwin Samuels said that the reconstruc­tion is presently being done in three parts.

Each part, he said, will comprise twenty cells which will accommodat­e sixty prisoners.

According to Samuels, the reconstruc­tion at the Camp Street prison, which was burnt to the ground by prisoners in July, 2017, had started a while ago but was stopped after Guyana recorded its first COVID19 case in March.

“….I think the last day they would have worked prior to the restart was April….They would have stopped working on that date,” Samuels said.

However, Samuels added after being given clearance by the relevant authoritie­s about two weeks ago, the reconstruc­tion has recommence­d.

Hundreds of inmates were dislocated following the major fire at the Camp Street prison facility in 2017. It was the second attempt within a year. On March 3rd 2016, prisoners had also set fire to the capital offences section of the Camp Street Prison and 17 prisoners died.

About a year after, Samuels had announced that constructi­on of new holding facilities at the Camp Street Prison was likely to commence before the end of 2018.

Samuels had noted that they have already awarded a contract to a US company to construct prefabrica­ted cells. He stated that the new buildings will be built to accommodat­e the cells, which have the capacity to hold up to three prisoners.

Early last year, former Minister of Public Security Khemraj Ramjattan had said that the pre-fabricated steel cells had arrived and were already on site to be erected.

The arrangemen­t, he had said was one of the solutions identified to release the strain on the penitentia­ries caused by overcrowdi­ng, which has been significan­tly exacerbate­d since the 2016 and 2017 prison fires at the Camp Street jail.

In July this year, Samuels had told this newspaper that some 350 prisoners were released as part of efforts to reduce the size of the inmate population in the overcrowde­d prisons in wake of the COVID-19 outbreak.

“Overcrowdi­ng is a big issue. 180 prisoners will not significan­tly dent that situation or relief that situation but it is a work in progress,” Samuels noted yesterday.

Halted

Meanwhile, Samuels further explained that work on the first phrase of the

Mazaruni Prison expansion was also halted in early April due to the COVID19 outbreak.

He said the contractor­s were recently given clearance to recommence constructi­on but they are currently sorting out some logistics.

“They have been given clearance but there are some requiremen­ts in terms of persons returning to the compound, so the contractor­s are working out the logistics right now to address that,” Samuels said.

Once this is done, Samuels said works should be able to recommence at the Mazaruni prison soon.

The completion of Phase One of the Mazaruni Prison will accommodat­e an additional 200 prisoners.

“When phase two is completed which will run into next year, it will accommodat­e another 200 prisoners,” Samuels added.

In July, Samuels had said that efforts were being made to have the expansion of the Mazaruni Prison and the rebuilding of the Georgetown Prison completed.

Samuels had said that works at the two facilities were halted on April 2nd and 3rd, respective­ly following the COVID-19 outbreak. “Had it not been for

COVID, phase one of Mazaruni Prison, which has the capacity to accommodat­e 200 prisoners, would have been completed,” he had said.

 ??  ?? Gladwin Samuels
Gladwin Samuels

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