Red Cross helps Zimbabwe jails

prisons.jpg
HARARE - The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) has begun work to improve conditions in Zimbabwe's notorious prisons, a senior official with the world relief agency told ZimOnline Monday.

ICRC deputy head of delegation in Harare Andre Jaross said the organization

began work two weeks ago at Chikurubi Maximum Security prisons and at Harare

Central prison two weeks ago and would soon extend its work to other jails

across the country.

"The ICRC has reached agreement with the government of Zimbabwe that they

are allowed to work in the prisons," Jaross told ZimOnline by phone. "We

started around two weeks ago ..at Chikurubi and Harare Central and we will

expand to other prisons."

The ICRC will assess conditions in prisons, evaluate inmates’ requirements

and prepare a report for the Harare government but Jaross added that a key

component of the relief agency’s work in jails was also to "provide

(material) assistance according to requirements".

Zimbabwe Justice Minister Patrick Chinamasa — who earlier this month

accused the South African Broadcasting Corporation of lying after the

television aired horrifying footage taken from inside Zimbabwe’s prisons and

showing hundreds of gravely ill and starving inmates — declined to discuss

the ICRC’s work in prisons.

"Just report what they (ICRC) have told you," he said, when approached for

comment on the matter.

Zimbabwe’s prisons have for long been known to be virtual death houses with

hundreds of inmates reportedly dying in the jails because of diseases and an

acute shortage of food.

According to local prisoner’s rights group Zimbabwe Association for Crime

Prevention and Rehabilitation of the Offender (ZACRO) at least two inmates

die everyday due to hunger and disease at Chikurubi and Harare Central – the

country’s two biggest jails.

More often than not, inmates in many of the country’s jails have to survive

on a single meal per day of sadza (a thick porridge made of ground maize)

and cabbage boiled in salted water because there is no money to buy adequate

supplies.

An outbreak of pellagra disease in 2007 killed at least 23 inmates at the

notorious Chikurubi prison. Pellagra is a vitamin deficiency disease caused

by shortage of vitamin B3 and protein.

A parliamentary committee that toured Chikurubi and other prisons in 2006

was shocked to find inmates clad in torn, dirty uniforms and crammed into

overcrowded cells with filthy; overflowing toilets that had not been flushed

for weeks as water had been cut off due to unpaid bills.

The committee said in a report that the conditions in prisons were inhuman.

However nothing much has been done to date to improve conditions due to a

lack of resources. – ZimOnline

Post published in: News

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *