The Star Early Edition

Mandela rules for treatment in prison

- KATE MORRISSEY

THE UN has renamed its standard minimum rules on the treatment of prisoners the “Nelson Mandela Rules” to honour his legacy.

The renaming came as the UN presented updates to its 60year-old standard rules yesterday. The updates include the establishm­ent of a prisoner’s right to healthcare and the prohibitio­n of torture and discrimina­tion.

“The Nelson Mandela Rules convey a simple but profound message: prisoners are human beings, born with dignity and entitled to security and to the protection of their human rights,” said Mogens Lykketoft, the president of the UN Gen- eral Assembly.

He then quoted Mandela: “It is said no one truly knows a nation until one has been inside its jails. A nation should not be judged by how it treats its highest citizens, but its lowest ones.”

The updates also give guidance for intrusive searches like strip searches and body cavity searches, and specify provisions on solitary confinemen­t, which is now defined as 22 hours or more a day without human contact.

The rules also require prison directors to report any death or serious injury that happens to their prisoners immediatel­y and to investigat­e these situations promptly and without bias.

UN secretary-general Ban Ki-moon called the changes “a great step forward”.

When the executive director of the UN Office on Drugs and Crime, Yury Fedotov, first announced the resolution in May, he said: “The rules probably represent one of the most significan­t human rights advances in recent years.”

 ??  ?? FAMOUS PRISONER: Nelson Mandela
FAMOUS PRISONER: Nelson Mandela

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