Human Rights Commission South Asia
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UNHEALITY STATE OF PRISONS.
It is no coincidence that some
500 prisoners out of a total of 2,500 kept in the Sialkot district jail should
have been found suffering from hepatitis. Mainly a water-borne, infectious
disease that can be fatal, hepatitis is an alarmingly high-incidence ailment
prevalent in and outside the prisons. The overcrowded prison in question was
meant to house no more than 660 inmates, and in that it is no different from
other prisons in the country. Our detention centres notoriously lack basic
health and sanitation facilities, with the prevalent levels of congestion
putting the prisoners at a high risk of contracting infectious diseases. No
wonder that resort to violence on the part of the inmates and the existence of
crime within jails remain the sorry facts of prison life. There was a time when
prison officials at least used to commit themselves to the need for prison
reforms, but not anymore. The last time one heard of reforms in that quarter was
under the amended Police Ordinance of 2002, but the revamped law has not even
taken off the ground yet. The state of our prisons is pathetic: inmates are
routinely tortured; they are barely fed and clothed and forced to live in
subhuman conditions, with little recourse to justice.
Part of the problem of poor health and hygiene found among the prison population
stems from the unreasonably high number of under-trial prisoners being kept in
prisons alongside hardened criminals and convicts. In many prisons no provision
is made for keeping juvenile prisoners in separate barracks. Women, too, are
among the most vulnerable groups of inmates: a majority of them are booked under
the dubious Hudood Ordinances that presume them to be guilty before so proven in
a court of law. The need for urgent prison reforms cannot be overemphasized. It
is time the government, with help from international donor agencies, chalked out
a comprehensive reform plan. Under-trial prisoners, and even convicts, have
rights that must be respected. The least of these is the right to live in an
environment that is not detrimental to health or denies them basic hygiene.
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