Our Penal System Needs Reforms
By Graphic - Daily Graphic Feature Article | Fri, 21 Aug 2009
The prison officers themselves need redemption. They need better and decent accommodation.
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Feature Article : "The views expressed here are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent or reflect the views of Modernghana.com."
Last week, two news items with a common cord came into the public domain, which once again raised serious concerns about our penal system and conditions in our prisons.
In an interview granted the Daily Graphic, the Director-General of Prisons, Mr William Kwadwo Asiedu, painted a horrid picture of conditions in the country's prison facilities.
Quoting from the 2008 Annual Report of the Ghana Prisons Service, Mr Asiedu mentioned overcrowding as a result of increasing prison population, poor facilities for both inmates and service staff and dwindling budgetary allocation.
According to the report, the cumulative prisoner population of 4,867,366 in 2007 increased by 5.9 per cent to 5,170,840 in 2008. The report gave the daily average lock-up figures as 13,335 and 14,128 for 2007 and 2008 respectively.
What the Director-General of Prisons said was no news to those who care to know about the deplorable conditions in the country's prisons.
Perhaps, what might jolt many, is the 5,170,840 figure contained in the 2008 Annual Report on the Ghana Prisons Service as the cumulative annual prisoner population for the year 2008.
If this figure is a true reflection of affairs, then it means that at any particular time of the year, almost a quarter of the country's population was being accommodated in the country's prisons.
That is quite intriguing and a serious cause for alarm. With the limited resources and poor facilities available, what that means is that most of the prisoners are paying more than enough for their crimes or offences.
The remedy as has always been prescribed is to build more prisons, expand the existing ones and equip them adequately so that they can play their statutory role as reformation and correctional centres.
Mr Cletus Avorka, the Minister of the Interior, as it seemed, sounded like one of those who did not have the true picture of what our prisons looked like until he came face to face with reality, when he visited the Ho Central Prisons.
He, like many others before him, could not but call for reforms in the country's penal system, when he saw at first-hand, the degrading, dehumanising and appalling state of the prison, which in all probability, may not be different from the rest in the country.
Mr Avorka might have been overwhelmed by what he saw at the prison and got carried away by anger and emotion when he misdirected his frustration at the police by saying, “The police should promote reconciliation by mediating petty squabbles and not use the courts as a dumping ground of our problems.”
“It was unfair to jail people whose infractions were only misdemeanour, to cram the same prison with hardened criminals when they could do community service,” he said when he observed that there were serious flaws in the country's penal system.
He was, therefore, right to call for the revision of the country's penal system to ensure effective modern correctional trends. But are the police strong enough to carry the burden of penal transformation alone?
Or should they be seen to be the sole culprits in a bad situation such as this national calamity? Surely I do not think Mr Avorka was expecting the police to set up their own penal system to determine those who go to jail, those who do community service and those who are just cautioned and told to go and sin no more.
What will Mr Avorka and those who share his opinion say, if the police stations become arbitration centres and where offenders and criminals are told to go home and come no more because the courts are full?
That means the matter cannot be treated so simply. It goes beyond the police to determine who gets custodial sentence, who gets a fine and who does community service.
What about the courts which fail to exercise their discretionary powers in a reasonable manner as to avoid imposing custodial sentence when a fine could still have applied according to the law?
It is true that there are many men and women parading the streets of our towns and cities not only as free citizens, but as proud, influential and respectable people after embezzling millions of public money or using many criminal means, drug-dealing and money laundering to amass wealth, while a farmer who steals a bunch of plantain from a neighbour's farm is seen as a criminal who goes to jail for long terms.
But that is the society we have created for ourselves in which more value is placed on wealth than substance. Just imagine that a person who once held public office is called upon to render account for his stewardship, then suddenly he becomes a hero and escorted to the court premises amidst fanfare and chanting of war songs. Continued
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Ghana's Penal System
Osabarima Darko | Alexandria, Virginia-USA (Location: United States) | 8/22/2009 1:48:00 PM
Ghana's Penal Code, if any at all, needs to be reviewed. Recent developments as results of court fines and other sentences reveal a real serious problem in our system. I even do wonder if at all we have a penal code that regulates and guides sentencing officers. There are quite serious fraud in the system. We need to update our system to meet growing times. Throughout the world, crime, in particular, has increased with growing population. We have been taken by events and therefore awakened from our slumber. The first line of the system comes with the police, before the court system and then the corrections. All these three institutions need to come together to find a lasting solution to the country's penal system.



