|
Back to Index
Red
Cross feeding thousands of prisoners
IRIN News
June 08, 2009
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=84756
The International
Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) is feeding 6,300 prisoners
in Zimbabwe's jails and this number is expected to rise as the international
aid agency expands the survey of inmate nutritional levels.
Askar Umarbekov, ICRC
head of operations in Zimbabwe, told IRIN that the prisons in most
provinces had been surveyed, but declined to divulge the prisoners'
state of health as all findings were confidential.
Prisons in the second
city, Bulawayo, and most other provinces had been seen by the ICRC
teams, but those in and around the capital, Harare, have yet to
be visited.
A report by Zimbabwe's
Association for Crime Prevention and Rehabilitation of the Offender,
an NGO advocating the rights of prisoners, said at least 20 inmates
were dying daily in the country's jails.
In March 2009 the South
African investigative television documentary programme, Special
Assignment, secretly filmed conditions in two of Zimbabwe's 55 prisons
and revealed emaciated inmates surviving on a daily handful of prison
rations of sadza, or maize-meal porridge, the staple food.
Justice and Legal Affairs
Minister Patrick Chinamasa told local media a few days before the
documentary was broadcast: "As I speak, the [overall] prison
population is at its lowest - 14,000; we have never been that low."
He admitted to poor nutritional levels, but dismissed reports that
cholera was afflicting inmates.
Umarbekov said the documentary
programme, Hell Hole, had had an impact but "was not directly
linked" to the ICRC's "offer of services made in December
2008" to the prison authorities to assist in providing adequate
nutrition to prisoners. Food assistance to prisons started in April
2009, he said.
The documentary was made
during the lean season - the few months before the main maize harvest
- when about seven million Zimbabweans were receiving emergency
food assistance, and a nationwide cholera outbreak had killed thousands
of people and infected tens of thousands more.
"Once the food situation
has stabilized, the ICRC will continue to assess the overall conditions
of detention. In cooperation with the authorities, it will refurbish
kitchen and sanitation facilities, and upgrade water supply systems,"
the ICRC said in a statement.
"It will work to
prevent transmission of communicable disease and make sure that
detainees receive the treatment they require in event of any outbreak
of disease such as cholera ... The ICRC will work with the authorities
to ensure that improvements achieved in the food situation inside
prisons are maintained."
The ICRC is appealing
for more than US$18 million in funding for its prison feeding programme,
as well as projects to provide agricultural inputs to about 63,000
people in the provinces of Mashonaland Central and Mashonaland East,
who have been living in extreme poverty since the election violence
in 2008, and for financing medical clinics in the capital.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|