Awaiting
Trial Persons hang between life and death in dingy prison cells, uncertain of
their fate, ADELANI ADEPEGBA Of PUNCH writes
It was an assessment
visit to Kuje Prison in Abuja by the Minister of Internal Affairs, Mr. Abba
Moro. But he got more than he bargained for as about 20 Boko Haram suspects
awaiting trial in the maximum-security prison protested the delay in their
trial since 2012 when they were arrested and detained at the jail.
The
inmates claimed that they had been in detention for a period of one year
without trial by a court of competent jurisdiction. The suspects were arrested
in Kano and Borno states on suspicion of having links with the dreaded Boko
Haram sect.
The
inmates asked the minister to provide additional vehicles to Kuje Prisons to
facilitate the movement of suspects to courts for trial. An inmate, who did not
disclose his name, said he had spent eight years in Kuje Prison and blamed the
slow justice delivery system on the congestion in Nigerian prisons.
Narrating
his experience, he said that he had been to court more than 57 times within the
period.
The inmate
therefore urged the minister to do everything within his power to fast track
the justice system in the country, adding, “not all inmates in the prison are
criminals.”
This
scenario captures the plight of awaiting trial inmates in Nigerian prisons. As
at September 2012, the 235 prisons in the country have a total population of
54,156 consisting of 38,352 awaiting trial persons, 15,593 convicted males
and 211 convicted females.
Most
people believe that the management of the Nigerian Prison Service is not doing
enough to address the issue of ATPs, but the NPS itself has expressed worry
over the huge population of ATPs in its custody, which constitutes a burden on
its finances, and the effective operation of the penitentiaries. They have also
been described as a latent danger to the society.
The prison
is meant for convicted persons, but the opposite is the case in Nigeria as the
population of ATPs surpasses that of convicts.
Though the
NPS has different skill acquisition programmes for inmates, ATPs do not benefit,
as they are not regarded as ‘legal residents’ of prisons. They are thus left to
literally vegetate because the system has not been ‘authorised’ to reform them.
They are forgotten by the courts and are unwanted by the prison system, which
sees them as a nuisance.
The prison
service seems to be helpless in this regard. As the Assistant
Comptroller-General in charge of Social Welfare, Chuks Afujie, told Saturday
PUNCH, the ATPs pose a big constraint to the prison system because they occupy
a lot of space that could be used for other purposes. He said, “Awaiting trial
inmate could escape if allowed to participate in training programmes and this
could jeopardise an officer’s career. ATPs are not seen as the prison service’s
responsibility and they are not usually allowed to participate in training
programmes.”
In the
last one year, the system has experienced jailbreaks with many detainees
escaping from the harsh conditions in the gulag. Amnesty International, in its
2008 report, condemned the appalling state of Nigeria’s prison system, saying
that Nigeria’s prisons are filled with people whose human rights are being
systematically violated. The organisation said that the criminal justice system
in Nigeria, which it described as a “conveyor belt of injustice, from beginning
to end,” is utterly failing the people.
In a
50-page report, the organisation reveals how at least 65 per cent of Nigeria’s
inmates have never been convicted of any crime, with some awaiting trial for up
to 10 years; how most people in the prisons are too poor to afford a lawyer,
with only one in seven awaiting trial having access to private legal
representation. It also reveals how appalling prison conditions, including
severe overcrowding, are seriously damaging the mental and physical health of
thousands.
“The
problems in Nigeria’s criminal justice system – especially its prisons – are so
blatant and egregious that the Nigerian government has had no choice but to
recognise them – and has pledged many times that it will reform the system.
“However,
the reality is that those in prison stand little chance of their rights being
respected. Those without money stand even a lesser chance. Some could end up
spending the rest of their lives behind bars in appalling conditions without
ever having been convicted of a crime – sometimes simply due to their case
files having been lost by the police, “ said Aster van Kregten, Amnesty
International’s Nigeria researcher, while speaking at a press conference
in Abuja. Unfortunately, the situation has barely improved, four years
later.
The NPS,
however, insists that it has evolved new strategies and reforms to turn things
around in the system. It lays the blame of high ATPs on the doorstep of the
police and the judiciary. Acting DCG, Operations, Ibrahim Zuru, described the
huge number of awaiting trial inmates as “a monster staring at the prison
service,” adding that the prison authority has introduced prisoners upkeep
management system which involves paying personal attention to individual
inmates in collaboration with some non-governmental agencies, including the
Nigerian Bar Association.
The NPS
management, Zuru added, was training its armed squads to respond to incidents
of jailbreaks and provide security for the prison environment.
Assistant
Comptroller-General of Prisons in charge of Research and Publication, Dr.
Ifedora Orakwe, at a briefing with journalists at the NPS headquarters in
Abuja, stated that the ATPs were the consequence of a malfunctioning judiciary.
“Prison
service’s responsibility is to reform inmates and not to keep them
indefinitely; we can’t perform the function of the police or the judiciary,” he
said.
He
observed that the police who dumped people in the prisons caused the congestion
in the prisons and the NPS officer has no choice than to accept anyone brought
to the facility once there is a warrant from the court.
On what
the service is doing to address the problem, Orakwe said that the NPS has
deployed its lawyers to assist detainees in getting quick justice. Orakwe pointed
out that detention of inmates for long without trial posed a danger to the
society as the victims of such treatment often become embittered, and
frustrated and they turn against the society when released. According to him,
the root of the Boko Haram insurgency in the country could be traced to unjust
detention of people who had taken arms against the state.
He said,
“Boko Haram comes from illegally detained people who may have become bitter and
frustrated. When they leave their jail cells during jailbreaks, they turn
against the society. Government must pay attention to those behind the walls
because when they are released into the society, they become dangerous, if not
well managed.”
To make
the inmates useful to themselves and the society, the NPS said it had developed
various self-development programmes which the inmates participated in.
Deputy
Comptroller-General of Prisons (Training), Alhaji Mohammed Isah, explained that
the service has agricultural and industrial units where inmates are trained. He
stated that 124 inmates were trained on trade in 2012 and 18 had grade A, 80
had grade 2 and 32 grade 3, while 335 others were to be tested.
Isah said
his department has acquired new binding machines for welding and the tools
have been deployed in Kaduna and Kuje prisons while plans are on to extend it
to Calabar Prisons. According to him, the NPS has a cottage industry for raw
materials and also runs a printing press in Lagos, which generated over N2m in
2011.
“We have
over 1,500 inmates under training in agriculture and we generated over N26
million last year. We also set up a shoe factory in Aba, Abia State and we are
working with various agric research institutes to boost our farming techniques
and increase our yield and outputs,” the DCG said.
Afujie
said a number of inmates had benefited from the literacy programme of the
service. He said that in Abakaliki, Ebonyi State, the service runs primary and
secondary schools and 34 inmates sat for NECO in 2012; 34 also sat for
WAEC and NECO in Enugu Prisons and 33 others are running NOUN programme.
He added
that while four inmates are running NOUN programmes in Awka Prison, 53 sat for
NECO in Kuje Prisons while a study centre is also being considered for the
facility, adding, “48 inmates were recommended to the Federal Government for
release.”
The
service, on December 19, 2012, presented working tools to 25 former prison
inmates to enable them to be self-dependent, as part of its aftercare programme.
The beneficiaries, drawn from five states in different geo-political zones in
the country, were given trade materials for various vocations including
tailoring, welding, interior decoration and hair dressing at a brief
ceremony at the NPS Headquarters, Abuja.
Comptroller-General
of Prisons, Mr. Ibrahim Zakari, explained that the materials were procured for
the beneficiaries after they had learnt various trade during their prison
terms.
The CG
added that the inmates had made commitments in writing that they would
cooperate with the NPS to manage their post-adjustment efforts.
He said,
“One of the beneficiaries who resides in Dutse Alhaji in Bwari Area Council of
Abuja has got a workshop in Utako; he is into interior decoration and was a
student of NOUN while in prison. He is continuing with his NOUN programme and
is now at 400 level and his major is cooperative studies. He has equally
volunteered to go round our prisons and speak to our inmates as a role model.”
Zakari
stated that the prison service runs an entrepreneurial training programme for
inmates at the maximum, medium and the female prisons, Kirikiri, Lagos in collaboration
with the Prison Fellowship Nigeria, Covenant University, Ota and the Small and
Medium Enterprises Agency of Nigeria.
The CG
said that about 61 inmates had graduated from the entrepreneurial programme
while 21 inmates matriculated in July. He added that 43 inmates at Enugu, Lagos
and Port Harcourt prisons special study centres of the National
Open University of Nigeria matriculated on November 24, 2012, bringing the
number of inmates on the NOUN programme at the centres to 77.
On behalf
of other beneficiaries, Rasheed Sodipo and Chukwuma Okoye thanked the service
for the tools and promised to utilise them well. Okoye, who is running a NOUN
programme, said he was detained for 10 years for assault without trial.
Apart from
training inmates, the service is also retraining its personnel. ACG Jafaru
Ahmed in charge of Administration said about 1,263 staff were recently trained
while 249 personnel graduated from the staff college in Kaduna.
“Two
recently went for courses at the Institute of Security Studies, Bwari, Abuja;
10 undergoing counter-revolutionary warfare training at Army college, Jaji; 37
attended command course; 810 attended CPS in Lagos and Kaduna while 2285 junior
staff were recently promoted,” he stated.
The prison
officers were saddened by the apparent neglect of the prison system by the
government and they were particularly miffed by the apathy of the state
governments who they accused of not bothering about the welfare of the inmates.
“State
governors donate vehicles and money to the police and other agencies, but
conveniently forget the prisons where the criminals and other bad characters
are kept. Yet, these inmates may not have been brought to the prisons if the
government had embarked on proper social engineering and invested in youths and
the people; prison congestion is a foundation for future calamity,” they
warned.
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