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Prisoners
routinely dying from starvation, illness
IRIN News
May 10, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=72083
HARARE - Two former inmates
have described to IRIN the horrendous conditions prevailing in Zimbabwe's
prison system, where prisoners routinely die from illness and starvation,
and are urging human rights organisations to make an independent
assessment of the country's jails.
Zimbabwe has roughly
35,000 people incarcerated in 42 jails, but this is well over their
intended capacity of about 17,000 inmates.
The country is in the
in the midst of an economic meltdown, in which the plight of prisoners
seems all but forgotten: inflation is running at 2,200 percent,
unemployment is above 80 percent and shortages of electricity, fuel
and food are commonplace.
Moreover, as a consequence
of drought and the disruptions to agriculture caused by President
Robert Mugabe's fast-track land reform programme, which redistributed
white-owned farmland to landless blacks, the staple food, maize,
is also in short supply.
John, a recently released
inmate who declined to be identified, told IRIN that there were
often food shortages. "In the morning, prisoners drink a very
watery broth made from maizemeal, water and salt; in the afternoon
they are fed plain green vegetables with 'sadza' [maizemeal porridge],
which is repeated in the evenings."
He said there were times
when they had to make do with a single meal per day, and the food
was often so badly prepared that some inmates had stopped eating.
In the capital, Harare,
a medical orderly employed by the health department and working
in prison services, told IRIN that more than one hundred inmates
had died of pellagra at Harare Central and Chikurubi Maximum prisons
since the beginning of the year.
Pellagra is caused by
a deficiency of vitamin B3 and trypophan, an essential amino acid
found in meat, poultry, fish and eggs, all foodstuffs that are no
longer available in the canteens of the Zimbabwe Prison Services,
or to employees of the Zimbabwe Republic Police and the Zimbabwe
National Army. The security forces are now served sadza and brown
beans, because the government has insufficient funds to provide
other foodstuffs.
The symptoms
of pellagra include high sensitivity to sunlight, aggression, insomnia,
weakness and mental confusion, followed by dementia and, eventually,
death.
"There
is a disaster waiting to happen, if it is not already happening
- every day, dead bodies are recovered, especially at Chikurubi
Maximum Prison, where as many as 10 deaths can be recorded in one
day. Health conditions are also terrible, as the Zimbabwe Prison
Services has no money to treat the inmates," the medical orderly,
who asked to remain anonymous, told IRIN.
Tendai, another former
inmate of Chikurubi prison, told IRIN that the prison authorities
were also no longer able to provide them with toiletries. "If
your relatives do not bring you some soap then you will go on and
develop skin diseases. In addition, the government is no longer
able to provide inmates with prison garb, leaving many to depend
on relatives to supply them with clothes, or be forced to go naked."
In the past three months
there was no clean drinking water available at Chikurubi, Tendai
said, because the Zimbabwe National Water Authority, a parastatal
company, did not have the necessary capacity to supply water to
the high-security complex. Water bowsers had been brought to the
prisons, but the water quality was inadequate for drinking.
A recent visit by a delegation
of parliamentarians to Chikurubi found that toilets had not been
flushed for weeks because there was no running water, and pages
torn from Bibles were being used as toilet paper. The unsanitary
conditions have made diarrhoea and skin diseases a permanent feature
of prison life.
In response
to the rapidly deteriorating conditions in the prison system, justice
minister Patrick Chinamasa said the government was working on formulating
an open prison system, in which offenders would serve part of their
jail terms at their homes to help decongest the prisons.
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