The Citizen (KZN)

Inmates earn money building miniature cars

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– In a prison in La Paz, inmate Julio Mamani beats a metal sheet from which he is building a tiny truck his wife will try and sell at a craft fair.

She will take it to the La Alasita market, where Bolivians flock once a year to buy scaled-down model vehicles, houses and other items that according to the Aymara indigenous belief will one day bring them the same items, but in real life. The tradition has proved a boon for prisoners like 59-yearold Mamani who sells their creations for between $10 (about R180) and $30 apiece.

Mamani spoke to AFP from a cell that serves as a kitchen and workshop, where he makes miniatures with three other inmates of the overcrowde­d San Pedro prison.

Built in the 1990s for 400 inmates, San Pedro today houses about 3 800.

Mamani, who did not want to talk about the criminal accusation­s against him, said he had not been to court for a year despite the law limiting pre-trial detention to six months.

Only about a third of Bolivia’s 24 824 prisoners have been convicted of a crime, according to the ombud’s office, which estimates overcrowdi­ng at about 168%.

Despite his predicamen­t, Mamani welcomes the chance to learn a new skill and earn some money for his family.

He made about 120 miniature cars and trucks for his first market a year ago, he said, mainly from old milk cans his wife brings on visits with the permission from the prison authority.

The Alasita craft fair, Bolivia’s biggest, opened on Wednesday for three weeks, as part of a festival honouring Ekeko, a deity of abundance.

David Lujan, serving a 12-year sentence for a crime he declined to reveal, makes motorcycle replicas mainly out of wood at San Pedro, where he participat­ed in carpentry classes.

“It helps to keep busy” and to “earn a bit of money,” the 29-yearold prisoner said. He intends to pursue the skill further once he is free.

Prison director Juan Carlos Limpias said the inmates and their ingenuity were proof that “nothing is impossible.”

“They are doing impossible things despite the limitation­s of overcrowdi­ng,” he said. –

 ?? Picture: AFP ?? HANDICRAFT. An inmate of the San Pedro prison shows a motorcycle he made with wood to be sold at the annual month-long Alasita fair in La Paz. The inmates sell their crafts at the cultural event to help their families, who are waiting for them outside the prison.
Picture: AFP HANDICRAFT. An inmate of the San Pedro prison shows a motorcycle he made with wood to be sold at the annual month-long Alasita fair in La Paz. The inmates sell their crafts at the cultural event to help their families, who are waiting for them outside the prison.

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