Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

UDAYA GAMMANPILA

United People’s Freedom Alliance (UPFA)

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Today, most people in prisons are those imprisoned for being unable to pay fines. To maintain a prisoner, the government spends Rs. 671 per person per day. Accordingl­y, a person who is imprisoned for being unable to pay a fine of Rs. 100 will impose a monthly “fine” of `over Rs. 20,000. Lankadeepa, 02 April 2019

The latest Prisons Statistics of Sri Lanka report, which contains updated data for 2017, showed the following.

Claim (1): In 2017, 57.9% of the 22,833 convicted prisoners were imprisoned for defaulting on the payment of fines (See Exhibit 1). This is in line with the MP’S first claim.

Claim (2): The daily average cost per prisoner in the year 2017 was Rs. 676. Therefore, the average monthly expenditur­e to maintain each prisoner would have amounted to Rs. 20,280 in 2017.

However, this figure does not represent the marginal cost (extra cost) of imprisonin­g each new prisoner.this is because it includes some unchanging costs of running the prisons, including utilities, salaries, and facilities maintenanc­e etc.these costs do not increase each time a new prisoner is added to the prison population and do not decrease when a prisoner is released.the extra cost of a person imprisoned for not being able to pay a fine, as the MP stated, would mainly be the cost of food, uniforms, etc., which is much lower than the average cost. The Prison Statistics report states that the average cost of food per prisoner per day was Rs. 114. According to the Ministry of Finance approved budget estimates, in 2017, only 15.7% of the Department of Prisons recurrent expenditur­e was spent on diets and uniforms, while all recurrent expenditur­e is used to calculate daily average cost per prisoner.

The majority of prisoners are in prison for being unable to pay fines. Although the average cost of maintainin­g a prisoner per month is in line with the MP’S claims, the extra cost of adding a new prisoner, to which the MP is referring, is much lower. Therefore, we classify the MP’S statement as PARTLY TRUE.

*Factcheck’s verdict is based on the most recent informatio­n that is publicly accessible.as with every fact check, if new informatio­n becomes available, Factcheck will revisit the assessment.

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