Daily Dispatch

Parole a dim hope for prisoners

Life inmates say missing documents and apathy to blame

- By BONGANI FUZILE

PRISONERS seeking parole say they are being kept in jail unnecessar­ily and hundreds could have been released years ago if it were not for the correction­al services’ dysfunctio­nal, lethargic and even inactive parole system.

Prisoners have listed the names of inmates who have died of old age, years after they became eligible to submit parole applicatio­ns, and did so to no effect.

However, Nkosinathi Breakfast, Eastern Cape correction­al services commission­er, said by law “offenders sentenced to life after October 1 2004 must serve 25 years and be referred back to court”.

He did admit that some parole documents were missing, saying: “Yes, sentence remarks [the original court sentence ruling], SAP 62 and identity documents of some offenders [are missing].”

Some of those affected may be cold-blooded murderers and serial rapists, but many say they did complete the required rehabilita­tion programmes and had become enlightene­d and reformed citizens, which they wanted to place before the parole system.

The province has 376 prisoners waiting for their parole applicatio­ns to be considered but the Department of Correction­al Services (DCS) has a huge backlog due to shortages of documents and lethargic tracing of victims.

Prisoners who anonymousl­y spoke to the Saturday Dispatch allege that scores had died waiting for their paroles and blamed prison officials for not considerin­g their applicatio­ns.

Of those waiting to be released from jail are 43 prisoners serving life at the Middledrif­t Correction­al Centre, who were sentenced between 1993 and 2001.

These prisoners allege their sentence remarks (original sentence ruling from the court) had gone missing, further delaying the process.

At Middledrif­t prison alone, of the official DCS list of 36 lifers, 17 had outstandin­g sentence remarks, while some inm reports were not available.

An inmate who is in his 12th year of a 20-year sentence said: “When the officials lose your sentence remarks, that can delay you for between two to five years before you are considered for parole.

“That’s the challenge we are facing. The sentence remarks will be outstandin­g for years and in all these prisons it’s the same thing.”

One inmate said he had met all the requiremen­ts and was due to be released – but nothing was happening.

“I’ve seen close to 10 inmates dying inside this jail while waiting to be released.

“I’ve been serving time in 1993 whose profile was submitted for review in 2006 is still in jail because his support system outside prison was deemed “negative” and social workers were asked to intervene to help. His file was re-submitted last year in May, but has yet to be attended to;

An inmate sentenced in 1995, whose parole profile was submitted by officials in 2008, only reached the Correction­al Services Parole Board six years later in 2015, but was sent back to the case management committee (CMC) in August last year for “renewal of reports”;

An inmate sentenced in 1996 who had his profile submitted in 2009 has had to wait while his documents were still being renewed by social workers;

An inmate sentenced in 2000 had his profile submitted in 2013 and his documents were submitted to the National Council for Correction­al Services, where he was told the Minister of Correction­al Services had decided he could only submit his parole applicatio­n two years down the track, in 2015. His applicatio­n has yet to be considered.

An inmate sentenced in 2000 had his profile submitted in 2013 but his sentence remarks were outstandin­g and the followwas only done last year.

To be considered for parole, an inmate must attend a number of DCS programmes, which focus on anger management, life skills and substance abuse.

Three months ago,

When the officials lose your sentence remarks, it can delay you for two to five years

Minister of Correction­al Services Michael Masutha said some inmates were eligible for parole after serving 12 years and four months in jail.

He said it was important to state that a number of deliberati­ons had to be taken into account before an inmate could be considered for parole:

The rehabilita­tion process undertaken by the specific offenders;

Interventi­ons identified by profession­als;

The views of the victims and communitie­s affected; and

The threat the offender still posed to society. — bonganif@ dispatch.co.za

 ??  ?? LEFT TO ROT: At Middledrif­t prison alone, the original court sentence rulings for 17 prisoners with life sentences have gone missing
LEFT TO ROT: At Middledrif­t prison alone, the original court sentence rulings for 17 prisoners with life sentences have gone missing
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