Sunday Star-Times

The prison system has got form

- Polly Gillespie

Some of the best people I know have been to prison. I must also say that some of the best people I know have taken some fairly odd off-road tracks, and tumbled willingly down some pretty dark and nefarious rabbit-holes.

Fortunatel­y the end of their travels have found them neither still in jail or stuck down dodgy rabbit-holes. They are good people leading arguably noble lives. Let us then establish that I am not anti-prisoner. I am most fiercely anti-violence. I am strictly anti-breaking the law, and I am utterly anti the production and distributi­on of drugs and all the accompanyi­ng criminal activity.

As the saying goes, surely prison itself is punishment enough.

Inmates starting fires and rioting. Sounds very naughty, doesn’t it. It sounds like the stuff very naughty, bad, wicked people would do. I have a rather different take on this whole Waikeria Prison stand-off. Very different.

I googled ‘Waikeria Prison’, and coming up first was a descriptio­n on the Correction­s website that sounded more like a high-end real estate agent’s cheesy pitch;

‘‘Waikeria Prison is set in a 1200-hectare site near Te Awamutu in the Waikato.’’ Splendid. Sounds grand.

‘‘Oh I say, darling. This place looks terrific. Want to go and stay at Waikeria for the weekend? Looks smashing!’’

The truth is that it was built in 1911, three years before the outbreak of World War I. Several years before the influenza pandemic, and long before the discovery of antibiotic­s.

Parts of Waikeria Prison are condemned. Yes, they are busily building new facilities, but meanwhile there are still prisoners living in pre-World War I conditions.

How could inmates get so angry that they start riots? How could it get to a place where they set their meagre mattresses on fire? Could it be because they didn’t get enough loo paper? Did these naughty, wicked baddies decide to do it because they were bored or had no phone rights? I don’t believe so.

You see, this is what I have come to believe. In every institutio­n or government department there are forms. Forms must be filled out. It’s red tape. It’s the dotting of I’s and crossing of T’s. In prison, the most important form is the PC.01. The prisoner complaint form.

If a prisoner needs something, has a complaint, or has any issues that could include anything from denial of basic human rights to a lack of bog paper, they go to the officers in ‘‘the fish bowl’’, the office situated in the middle of the common area, for a form. Or they request one from a floor officer. They get delivered one at some stage during that day, complete it. They hand it back and then, when it has been lodged by the initial officer, the prisoner gets a receipt. It’s stamped and signed. This doesn’t mean that the officer who took back the form has seen it. It means it’s been officially lodged so people much higher up the food chain see it. Like the principal complaints officer. Then in some cases, if the complaint is serious enough, it goes to the Ombudsman. It’s a system that ensures prisoner complaints and concerns are not ignored. But if there’s no form filled in and lodged, there’s no investigat­ion. There is no inquiry. Everything seems perfectly as it should.

Before the riots began, I am told, there was no access to PC.01 forms, even though prisoners asked and asked. Without forms they couldn’t request simple things like toilet paper. Apparently there are always loads of excuses given to the prisoners about why they can’t access forms. It could be lack of printer ink or the classic ‘‘oops I forgot!’’

If no forms are lodged, then all is well in prison-land apparently. So when the top-dog prison officials said on the news ‘‘well, we didn’t know of any concerns

. . .’’ or ‘‘there was no indication of prisoners going without basic human rights’’, they were right. They were right because the only way the prisoners could lodge simple concerns about toilet paper or whatever else, was via the PC.01, and if these forms were not being handed out , absolutely no concerns were being seen or heard. By anyone. Nothing was lodged. Nothing was done. Plausible denial.

So now it’s a massive riot, and prisoners are making weapons, and prison workers are scared, and really all because this is what happens in any society when people with few rights or means are not heard. When people have had enough of being denied human rights, or a bloody form to get toilet paper, if they are ignored long enough, they will revolt.

For God’s sake, print out some more PC.01 forms, guys.

Prison is the punishment. Having no voice and nothing to wipe your arse with is not part of this country’s way of incarcerat­ing prisoners.

In a statement, the Department of Correction­s responded: With regards to complaints from people in prison, there are a number of channels for prisoners to report concerns or make complaints, including through the PC.01 system, the independen­t Correction­s Inspectora­te (0800 free call number available to prisoners) or the Office of the Ombudsman. These channels are free for any prisoner to contact, with contact details readily available to individual­s.

 ?? DOMINICO ZAPATA/STUFF ?? Inmates at Waikeria Prison in the Waikato have engaged in a prolonged stand-off with authoritie­s this week in an episode which highlighte­d conditions at the jail.
DOMINICO ZAPATA/STUFF Inmates at Waikeria Prison in the Waikato have engaged in a prolonged stand-off with authoritie­s this week in an episode which highlighte­d conditions at the jail.
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