JavaScript is disabled in your web browser or browser is too old to support JavaScript. Today almost all web pages contain JavaScript, a scripting programming language that runs on visitor's web browser. It makes web pages functional for specific purposes and if disabled for some reason, the content or the functionality of the web page can be limited or unavailable.

Wednesday, May 7, 2025

Two-thirds of prison population in remand sections

by

1604 days ago
20201215
File picture: Inmates in a cell at the Remand Yard at the Golden Grove Prison.

File picture: Inmates in a cell at the Remand Yard at the Golden Grove Prison.

ROBERTO CODALLO

Two out of every three peo­ple in the na­tion’s pris­ons are in the re­mand sec­tions, Pres­i­dent of the Prison Of­fi­cers As­so­ci­a­tion Ceron Richards has said.

He was speak­ing dur­ing a di­a­logue ses­sion host­ed by the Caribbean Cen­tre for Hu­man Rights in col­lab­o­ra­tion with Di­a­logue So­lu­tions. Richards dis­closed that as of Sun­day there are 2,328 in­mates await­ing jus­tice in the re­mand sec­tions of the na­tion’s pris­ons, which he said rep­re­sents two-thirds of the 3,743 peo­ple com­mit­ted to the pris­ons.

“There are 1,415 con­vict­ed in­mates which is just one third con­vict­ed so there­in lies our cur­rent sit­u­a­tion. There is no pur­pose-built re­mand yard fa­cil­i­ty built and de­sign pur­pose­ly to house in­mates in so they are left in very in­hu­mane and un­in­hab­it­able over­crowd­ing con­di­tions so cramped that it is list­ed in­hu­mane and not amount to prop­er treat­ment,” Richards said.

He added that frus­tra­tion lev­els are not just high among in­mates but among of­fi­cers too.

“It is very nor­mal to see per­sons spend­ing ex­cess of ten and 17 years in re­mand be­cause the road to jus­tice is not swift,” Richards stat­ed.

He said over the years the as­so­ci­a­tion has made sev­er­al rec­om­men­da­tions to al­ter­na­tive term im­pris­on­ment which in­cludes build­ing a new re­mand fa­cil­i­ty, pa­role sys­tem and elec­tron­ic mon­i­tor­ing.

Guest speak­er Baz Dreisinger, founder Pris­ons-to-Col­lege Pipeline and Ex­ec­u­tive Di­rec­tor In­car­cer­a­tion Na­tions Net­work said fund­ing is crit­i­cal for ac­tion.

“The folks from the IDB were say­ing they are open to ideas and open to sup­port­ing them and fund­ing them so the key is how do we get that fund­ing not for yet one more study but rather for ac­tion for com­mu­ni­ty courts, for al­ter­na­tive in­car­cer­a­tion pro­grams, for rad­i­cal vi­o­lence pre­ven­tion pro­grams.

We need to broad­en this con­ver­sa­tion and bring this in­to the gen­er­al pub­lic. Pris­ons were ei­ther to the bot­tom of the bud­get or sec­ond to bot­tom of the bud­get of all the gov­ern­ment spend­ing and the weight of that shifts when here is pub­lic pres­sure and I have been part of that shift in the Unit­ed States. I have watched and been part of the move­ment in 20 years in the US but when the cul­ture start­ed shift­ing and dis­course start­ed shift­ing when there were doc­u­men­taries made and books that came out to make peo­ple aware and shift the cul­ture and shift the con­ver­sa­tions and the voic­es of those di­rect­ly im­pact­ed at the fore­front the pub­lic starts to care.”

“When the pub­lic de­mands it, pol­i­cy has to re­spond,” she added.


Related articles

Sponsored

Weather

PORT OF SPAIN WEATHER

Sponsored