Carbonatix Pre-Player Loader

Audio By Carbonatix

Construction work on the Maximum Security Prison at Ankaful is steadily progressing and will soon be completed, Air Marshal John Asamoah Bruce (Rtd) has said. He noted that after its commissioning, the prison would take 2,000 high risk prisoners to ease the current overcrowding in the country's prisons. Air Marshal Bruce said this when he inaugurated the Brong-Ahafo Regional Prisons Committee in Sunyani on Thursday. The nine-member committee is chaired by Mr Kwadwo Nyamekye-Marfo, Regional Minister with members, including representatives of the Ghana Prisons Service (GPS), Attorney General's Department, Ghana Bar Association, Ghana Health Service and Social Welfare. Others were drawn from the Ghana Medical Association, House of Chiefs and Local Council of Churches. Air Marshal Bruce said; "A Regional Prisons Committee shall advice the Prisons Service Council on any matter relating to the administration of the prison service in the region," as stated in Article 209 (2) of the 1992 Constitution. He added that prisons in the country were unable to carry out their mandates of reformation because many conditions made it impossible for prisoners to become better citizens. He said even though the Ghana Prisons Service was doing its best under the circumstances, conditions in the prisons were still deplorable, especially with overcrowding and inadequate access to physical and mental healthcare. Air Marshal Bruce said due to these challenges, many prisoners are released into society unprepared to participate productively and they however slipped into recidivism. According to him, the current prison systems in the country were merely warehousing offenders and that this needed an urgent attention to be reversed. This required a complete societal behavioural change as well as emphasis on reformation and rehabilitation such as education and work skills as proper end of justice and not retribution, Air Marshal Bruce said. He called on the committee to collaborate with members of the Ghana Prisons Service, stakeholders and relevant institutions to carry out its functions effectively. Deputy Regional Minister Eric Opoku said the prison service was not set up to mete out cruel treatment to prisoners but rather reform inmates through prison treatment regimes. Reforming prisoners, he added, required a holistic approach and therefore needed a collaborative effort between the service, stakeholders and all Ghanaians. Mr Opoku expressed concern about the delay in criminal court proceedings which sometimes took a long period of time leading to long years of remand of suspects. Source: GNA

DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:  
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.