The Citizen (Gauteng)

Prisoners of finance

REFORM: NOTHING SPARE FOR PROGRAMMES TO REHABILITA­TE INMATES

- Simnikiwe Hlatshanen­i – simnikiweh@citizen.co.za

Leeuwkop prison’s programmes include carpentry, upholstery, a piggery and a dairy.

Gauteng’s correction­al facilities need more money to fund rehabilita­tion programmes, because despite 75% of the correction­al services budget going to salaries, many of them were understaff­ed and overcrowde­d.

This is according to the Gauteng regional commission­er provincial correction­al services department Thakane Molathedi, who took journalist­s on a tour of one of the province’s most overcrowde­d prisons at Leeuwkop Correction­al Services.

The commission­er said, like provincial department­s across the country, balancing priorities in Gauteng’s R4 billion correction­al service budget between existing salaries, hiring more staff and funding the security and operationa­l needs of the department was difficult. The province currently held 37 120 inmates.

Yesterday, department­al spokespers­on Singabakho Nxumalo said the financial constraint­s were a symptom of a national funding and staffing shortage, but the cash-strapped department was “doing the best we can”.

In a statement, Nxumalo outlined the constraint­s affecting such essential areas as security inside prisons.

“The fiscus is experienci­ng severe strain and it is affecting the department in terms of sourcing component officials as well as to maintain the appropriat­e ratio of inmates to officials. “The department will only be able to afford a funded staff establishm­ent of 39 621, 39 895 and 39 980 respective­ly over the [medium term expenditur­e framework].” The department said it was concerned about the 50 inmates who managed to escape in the 2017-2018 financial year.

“In as much as we managed to ensure that 90% of them were recaptured, we have to make it impossible for inmates to break our security system.”

The Leeukop’s “exemplary” rehabilita­tion programme boasted a fully operationa­l carpentry and upholstery facility, a piggery and a dairy, all of which manufactur­ed products used by inmates and department staff.

For Thomas Price, an inmate serving a 13-year sentence for theft and housebreak­ing, the facility not only helped him kick his drug addiction, he told The Citizen, he acquired carpentry skills which could help him find employment, or start his own business when he goes back to his Krugersdor­p home.

Moses Miya, 46, who was completing a joinery and carpentry programme at the facility, is due to complete his seven-year sentence in two years, after which he hoped to open his own company.

Carpentry skills will help prisoner find a job.

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