The Star Malaysia

Early release for over 5,500 prisoners

Tens of thousands more inmates are poised to be freed to prevent a possible surge in Covid-19 cases in the country’s overcrowde­d prisons.

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THE authoritie­s have granted more than 5,500 prisoners early release to help prevent a possible surge in coronaviru­s infections in Indonesia’s overcrowde­d prisons.

Human Rights Minister Yasonna Laoly said yesterday during a virtual meeting with the House of Representa­tives Commission III overseeing legal affairs that he had raised the number of prisoners that were planned to be released to 50,000 people from 30,000.

“As of today, at 11 a.m. according to our SDP (Correction­al Database System), we have released 5,556 prisoners,” he said.

According to Yasonna, the ministry had two legal bases for the release, namely the Human Rights Ministeria­l Regulation No. 10/2020 on terms and conditions of assimilati­on and integratio­n for prisoners and juvenile inmates to prevent the spread of Covid-19, as well as the Human Rights Ministeria­l Decree No. 19/2020 on the release of prisoners and juvenile inmates through assimilati­on and integratio­n to prevent the spread of Covid19.

He added that President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo agreed with the regulation­s.

Yasonna said the 50,000 inmates eligible for early release included some 15,442 drug convicts who had served five to 10 years in prison, 300 graft inmates aged 60 and above, 1,457 special crime convicts with chronic diseases and 53 foreign prisoners who had served two-thirds of their sentences.

“With these efforts, we can gradually release about 50,000 inmates and the number could increase, especially if the police and the Supreme Court can reduce the number of new inmates from the usual 2,500 per day,” he added.

Yasonna and the House had also agreed to restart deliberati­ons on a revision to the Criminal Code (KUHP) Bill and the 1995 law on correction­al procedures, which had been postponed following mass public protests against the House’s legislativ­e agenda following the passing of revisions to the Corruption Eradicatio­n Commission Law.

“We do not disagree about the

Bills,” he said.

He added that he would ask the president to send a new presidenti­al letter to ask the House to restart discussion­s of the Bills.

The lawmakers and the government had previously concluded deliberati­ons of the two Bills.

However, in September 2019, tens of thousands of university students in the country took to the streets to demand lawmakers hold off the passage of several controvers­ial laws, including the two Bills, arguing that the KUHP Bill, in particular, posed a threat to democracy and civil rights. — The Jakarta Post/ANN

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 ??  ?? Thorough task: red Cross members clad in protective suits disinfecti­ng a prison complex in Jakarta. (inset) a prison guard helping an inmate use a smartphone to contact family members via video call. — reuters/aFp
Thorough task: red Cross members clad in protective suits disinfecti­ng a prison complex in Jakarta. (inset) a prison guard helping an inmate use a smartphone to contact family members via video call. — reuters/aFp

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