The Citizen (Gauteng)

SA’s prisons are hellholes – report

PACKED IN: INCARCERAT­ED POPULATION TOTALS 162 875 WHEN THE CAPACITY IS 118 572

- Simnikiwe Hlatshanen­i – simnikiweh@citizen.co.za

‘An inmate could walk out of prison and nobody could stop him.’

Prison violence and overcrowdi­ng remain the most prevalent issues facing inmates in South Africa’s prisons, according to the Judicial Inspectora­te for Correction­al Services’ annual report for the 2018-19 review period.

According to the report, as of March 31, the prison population stood at 162 875 inmates, while the capacity or available bed space was 118 572.

Despite the department of correction­al services (DCS) having put plans in place to create more bed space, in practice, the report pointed out, the available space had not changed materially for the past three years.

In Gauteng, only two of the 15 prisons were not overcrowde­d.

Pollsmoor Prison in the Western Cape remained the most overcrowde­d, with its two centres (medium A and medium B) being 122% and 226% overcrowde­d respective­ly.

According to the report, assaults by wardens dominated the 730 complaints made by inmates which the body dealt with.

Violence was rife within the prison environmen­t while the report showed that inmates complained most about assault by officials, the Police and Prisons Civil Rights Union (Popcru) complained that wardens felt outnumbere­d and equally unsafe at the hands of violent inmates.

“We have complained about this issue daily and it is clear that the department has lost its mandate, which is to rehabilita­te prisoners,” said Popcru spokespers­on Richard Mamabolo.

“The correction­al centres have been used as money-making schemes through abusing the tender process and we have seen that through the Bosasa case.”

The department of correction­al services became embroiled in state capture allegation­s through the revelation of dodgy contracts with disgraced firm Bosasa, now known as African Global Operations. Mamabolo said most of the inmates in South Africa’s prisons remained idle in their waking hours due to a lack of vocational training facilities and programmes. He said this and understaff­ed prisons made conditions ripe for violence. The most violent DCS facility inspected was the Potchefstr­oom remand detention facility in North West. This, according to the report, was mainly due to gangs from local mines operating in the facility. Also noted in the report was St Albans in Port Elizabeth, which was also found to be violent, with gangs very active in the centre.

Not only are inmates victims of gang-related attacks, DCS officials are also often targeted.

“An inmate could walk out of prison and nobody could stop him because the number of inmates is so high, compared to the staff numbers, which have been declining due to some being charged or suspended because management is suppressin­g us,” lamented Mamabolo.

“We have been of the view that prisons should be self-sustaining and prisoners should be given skills, like welding, cooking and so on.

“But they decided to have tenders instead and now because of the Bosasa case, we know where

The mandate is to rehabilita­te prisoners

all that money went.”

The Judicial Inspectora­te for Correction­al Services recorded 103 unnatural deaths, many of unknown causes.

Inmates between the ages of 35 and 50 died most frequently.

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