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Zimbabwe's prisons in dismal condition
MDC
Youth Assembly
October
19, 2012
Hebrews 13 vs.
3: "Remember those in prison as if you were their fellow prisoners
and those who are mistreated as if you yourselves were suffering".
The MDC Youth Assembly is disturbed by the squalid, murky and appalling
state of Zimbabwe's prisons. Those who have been in prison
for different reasons either on remand or as serving inmates will
testify that the prisons are uninhabitable and are in desperate
need of compulsory wholesale refurbishment. Holding cells around
the country such as the one at Harare Central Police station have
been fervently and widely condemned by the public including human
rights groups as derelict and not fit for human inhabitance.
The majority of inmates are young people aged between 17 and 35.
Many of MDC leaders and activists around the country have been imprisoned
at some point including our President Morgan Tsvangirai. Amongst
those
still incarcerated are the Youth Assembly President Solomon
Madzore and 28 others.
The prison menu mainly comprises of brownish sadza and poorly cooked
beans, sometimes sadza with cabbages with little or no cooking oil.
For breakfast, the inmates are treated to a blackish porridge with
neither sugar nor salt. As if that was not bad enough, visitors
who visit the sentenced inmates at two week intervals are not even
allowed to bring them food from outside.
The inmates are in constant starvation. The rations are not nearly
enough, the inmates are too many and as a result a condition called
Pellagra has become endemic. This is as a direct result of persistent,
consistent and prolonged exposure to a systematic poor diet, continuous
hunger and inadequate portions of food. It has come to light that
in 2008 prison inmates died in their hundreds from this illness
and some of them were buried in the prison cemetery. Pellagra causes
the spinal cord to be dysfunctional which in turn affects the body's
movement and cause the senses to react very slowly. This is usually
mistaken for someone being mentally ill.
The situation is dire and is escalated by the fact that the responsible
authorities are not taking any meaningful measures to address these
challenges. It is tantamount to negligence on the part of the state
whose duty it is to take care of its citizens. Chikurubi Maximum
Prison, for example, houses about 1800 inmates who are faced with
this predicament day in day out and there is no hope that the situation
can/will be improved in the near future.
As the MDC Youth Assembly, we are deeply concerned about the basic
human rights of health and dignity of every single person in Zimbabwe
regardless of where they are domicile at any particular moment.
The MDC led government shall make prisons correctional and rehabilitation
facilities and not camps for systematically, directly or indirectly
killing inmates.
Since the inception of the GNU,
the Prime Minister of this Republic has tried a number of times
to visit the prisons and holding cells to assess the situation but
has been blocked by the security forces under unclear circumstances.
Many had hoped that after Dr Tsvangirai's assessment he was
going to recommend and action a robust program to refurbish all
prisons and holding cells and more importantly make sure that adequate
food and good health amenities is available for all inmates.
For and on behalf of the people of Zimbabwe
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