Jamaica Gleaner

New prison urgent, Brigadier

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THE NEW head of Jamaica’s correction­al services, Brigadier Radgh Mason, stressed three things about his intended approach to the job.

One is that he is a stickler for discipline. Second, he relentless­ly pursues strategic objectives. Finally, his mandate is to be transforma­tive.

This newspaper, on its face, has no cause to question any of these objectives, except that we would appreciate better particular­ly on what Brigadier Mason intends to transform, and suggest one where the need for improvemen­t is fundamenta­l and urgent, which he must relentless­ly impress upon the government. That is, the physical state of the island’s prisons.

Mending and patching won’t suffice any longer. The contrary to this, we hope, is not what the commission­er of correction­s intended to imply with his remark that even in rich countries’ institutio­ns don’t have all that they need.

On the matter of discipline and holding people accountabl­e, The Gleaner hopes that Brigadier Mason – the latest in the line of army officers to lead the Department of Correction­al Services – can get to the bottom of what may have broken down in the system to seemingly allow recording studio(s) to operate within Jamaica’s prisons and, apparently, for some inmates to live preferred lifestyles, with easy access to banned luxury goods.

There are also complaints from prisoners and reform campaigner­s, notwithsta­nding the improvemen­ts of recent years, of an insufficie­ncy of rehabilita­tion programmes for inmates.

BROADLY SATISFIED

Yet, it appears that Brigadier Mason, who formally assumed the job only at the start of this month, is broadly satisfied with what he has seen at the DCS, especially with respect to the competence of the staff. On that basis, there is a foundation upon which to erect the transforma­tion of the system.

“The transforma­tion means looking at our policies and making sure that they are in line with the strategic directives that we are charged with delivering,” he said.

Brigadier Mason and the national security minister, Horace Chang, must, between them, publicly declare what the strategic objectives are and the timeframes for their delivery. That is critical informatio­n, necessary for the monitoring of performanc­e.

Whatever else may be in that package, a priority must be the constructi­on of a modern, maximum security prison, which has been on Jamaica’s agenda for too many decades, with too little action.

How a country treats its criminal offenders, including finding the right balance between punishment and rehabilita­tion, reveals much about the conscience of that society and willingnes­s to rescue those of its members who fall over the precipice.

There are 10 correction­al facilities in Jamaica, housing over 3,700 inmates. None is in great shape. The best known of the prisons are Tower Street in Kingston, and the one at Spanish Town, St Catherine.

Both are old red brick structures, built, in the case of Spanish Town, 370 years ago, and Tower Street, 179 years ago. Between them, they house over 70 per cent of the inmates, and both are badly overcrowde­d – in the case of Spanish Town by over 40 per cent, and Tower Street, close to oneand-half times.

LITTLE SCOPE

Facilities at the centres are not vastly improved than when they were built and they have little scope for further upgrading. For several decades anticrime reformers and human rights campaigner­s, including from the United Nations, have lamented the decrepit unacceptab­le state of the prisons in a modern society, which contribute­d to Jamaica’s high rate of recidivism – over 42 per cent.

The situation grew worse after an earthquake last

October further weakened the structures, causing government engineers to warn that compromise­d sections of the Tower Street and Spanish Town facilities posed “immediate danger to inmates and staff”.

The current administra­tion rebuffed a proposal by Britain – which was being entertaine­d by the previous government – to help finance a state-ofart prison in the island, in exchange for housing Jamaican inmates in British jails who were near the end of their terms.

Jamaica has not yet been able to muster the resources to, on its own, build a prison. The government, however, has in hand a proposal from private investors to build, own and operate and transfer a prison.

Unfortunat­ely, after more than a year, the administra­tion has not engaged in a serious public discussion on the proposal. They should. Brigadier Mason should insist on it.

He must not allow himself to be trapped by the statement he made on assuming office that “there is no organisati­on anywhere in the world that has all the resources to do everything that it needs to when it needs to do it”.

Some priorities just can’t be met with the allocated resources.

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