Showing posts with label Prisoners. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Prisoners. Show all posts

Friday, January 19, 2024

South Sudan: Juba Central Prison capacity 370 inmates holding 20,000+ inmates due to missing files

THIS is terrible. Imagine being one of these prisoners held on remand indefinitely. So much work needs doing in South Sudan while the lives of 20,000 fit young prisoners are wasted mainly due to missing files. Where are the humanitarians, churches and human rights workers for situations like this? Hundreds of thousands of people are paid to help others in dire straits. It's often the case that practical help is rarely available when really needed.


From Radio Tamazuj, Juba City

Dated Friday, 19 January 2024 - here is a copy in full:


Advocate: Juba Central Prison overcrowded by remand inmates due to missing files

Inmates at the Juba Central Prison. (File photo)

The Juba Central Prison, a facility run by the South Sudan National Prisons Service, has run out of room to house inmates.


According to an advocate who talked to Radio Tamazuj, the prison has a capacity of 370 rooms to accommodate 370 inmates but is currently bursting at the seams due to overcrowding and is now holding over 20,000 prisoners. This, according to the lawyer, has resulted in very poor sanitation and hygiene at the facility.


Advocate Godfrey Victor Bulla, the Executive Director of Justice and Human Rights Observatory (JAHRO), a legal advocacy organization, told Radio Tamazuj Thursday that the prison has been overwhelmed by the surging numbers of prisoners.


“To be honest, the capacity of Juba Central Prison is overwhelmed,” he revealed. “The current number of inmates inside the prison has surpassed the capacity of the facilities that were constructed to accommodate a certain small number.”


Bulla said inmates on remand are more than those who have been convicted and called for the immediate decongestion of the prison.


“What I know is that the number of remanded prisoners is more than those convicted. Many people are being arrested and brought to the prison and some are not taken to court while others do not even have files at the prosecutor’s office,” he underscored. “This is very unbearable. Some of the prisoners are already developing sicknesses. Some sicknesses broke out in November last year and we almost lost two people with cases of chest infection, breathing issues, and paralysis.”


The advocate added: “There are even outbreaks of chicken pox that affect the skins of the prisoners.”


He further revealed that Juba Central Prison takes care of and houses inmates who are not supposed to be in the prison.


“Some people are brought by the public prosecutor’s office yet their files are not in court and they are detained on remand,” he said. “So, you find Juba Central Prison taking responsibility for those who are both convicted and those who are on remand.”


Asked about services in the prison, Bulla acknowledged the availability of services in the prison but said they are not enough for the ever-increasing number of inmates.


“Yes, they are providing facilities, I can say there is food and water but those facilities and services are not enough compared to the number of people in prison,” he insisted.


The advocate recommends a comprehensive approach and response to mitigate overcrowding at the prison and says the issues of violations of inmates' rights must not be taken lightly because violation of a single constitutional right is a violation of the aspiration of the people of the country.


“All the institutions within the criminal justice system must perform their constitutional responsibility without any compromise; the police must be responsible and be trained very well to carry a proper investigations; the judiciary must provide transport, must provide access to justice without any delay; the public prosecution must take the accused person to court within 24 hours,” he recommended. “Institutions that are providing legal aid must be supported to provide it. So, I am calling for a comprehensive approach and response that we must work on providing this and put an end to this holding of people on remand indefinitely and create a proper system.”


View original with thanks to Radio Tamazuj: https://radiotamazuj.org/en/news/article/advocate-juba-central-prison-overcrowded-by-remand-inmates-due-to-missing-files

ENDS 

Friday, December 01, 2023

FILM France24 investigates massacre in Darfur Sudan

NOTE from Sudan Watch Editor:  Every week I read hundreds of news reports and thousands of socials commenting on Sudan and South Sudan.

Most of it is propaganda, self-serving promo, activism, lazy journalism, AI. Little hard news coming out of Sudan is made public. Khartoum's destroyed.


People in organisations such as the UN can’t speak out, others work quietly in Port Sudan or neighbouring countries. Aid agencies must remain neutral.


This report by France 24 acts as a powerful witness to the pain and despair of long-suffering Sudanese facing a bleak future. It reduced me to tears. 


Much of the report is from Chad. Let's hope readers will view it more than once and listen closely to those who've been brave enough to be filmed.  


Note, the report says "accounts are reminiscent of the atrocities committed during the 2003-2013 war in Darfur". In reality, the Darfur war never ended.


The video can produce subtitles in different languages. It is simple to do: 

  • click on the video
  • go to its bottom frame
  • click on ‘CC’ to activate subtitles
  • click on  ‘wheel’ for Settings
  • click on ‘Subtitles/CC' - keep it in English or:
  • click on ‘Auto-Translate’ to see a list of other languages
  • click on desired language.
  • For viewers with special visual needs such as larger subtitles:
  • click on ‘Subtitles/CC’ and see 'options' in top right corner
  • click on ‘options’ to view and select from list of options.

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Report from REPORTERS France 24 English

Anchor MARK OWEN @markowenf24

Nairobi correspondent ELODIE COUSIN @MlleCsn

Dated Friday, 01 December 2023, 13:23 - here is a copy in full:


Stories of horror: Investigating a massacre in Sudan's Darfur region



Since the start of Sudan's brutal civil war in April, mass killings of civilians have been perpetrated in the West Darfur region. Our team investigates atrocities committed against the local Masalit ethnic group.


Since the start of the war in Sudan on April 15, the capital Khartoum has been the scene of a deadly power struggle between warring generals Abdel Fattah al-Burhan and Mohamed Hamdan "Hemedti" Dagalo. But in the west of the country, in Darfur, a different horror is unfolding. Hemedti's Rapid Support Forces (RSF) paramilitary and local Arab militia groups are systematically targeting the African Masalit ethnic group. Numerous videos have emerged of torture, massacres and arbitrary arrests. Refugees speak of sexual violence.


Our team went to the border between Chad and Sudan, where 450,000 people have taken refuge, to hear their stories. These accounts are reminiscent of the atrocities committed during the 2003-2013 war in Darfur, in which 300,000 people were killed, according to the UN. The International Criminal Court (ICC) has since opened an investigation into war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide against the main military leaders of the time.


Our Nairobi bureau brings us this special report.


View original: https://www.france24.com/en/tv-shows/reporters/20231201-stories-of-horror-investigating-a-massacre-in-sudan-s-darfur-region or https://f24.my/9yI7


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