Prison population swells
Wed, 16 December 2015
Phak Seangly ppp
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| People sit in the courtyard of Prey Sar prison on the outskirts of Phnom Penh earlier this year. Vireak Mai |
Cambodia's
badly overcrowded prison population leapt by nearly 20 per cent in the
first 10 months of this year, government data show, raising serious
health concerns.
The
figures, released by the Interior Ministry’s general department of
prisons yesterday, show that there were 17,522 prisoners in jails across
the country at the end of October, compared with 14,780 in detention in
December 2014, an increase of more than 18 per cent.
In September 2014, a report from rights group Licadho pegged the nation’s prison occupancy rate at 179 per cent of capacity.
Nut
Savanea, spokesman for the general department of prisons, said
yesterday that the spike was due to increased drug arrests and a
lethargic justice system.
The lack of alternative forms of punishment has led to a large number of imprisonments for minor drug offences, he added.
“Among
the detainees, more than 30 per cent were involved with drug crimes.
It’s hard to draw a conclusion about whether more people are committing
crimes or whether the authorities are being more effective than before,”
he said. “There’s no clear-cut answer.”
Only
about a third of those in prison had received a final verdict in their
cases, with many kept under lock and key in pre-trial detention.
“It’s
the way it’s done in the courts,” Savanea said. Am Sam Ath, technical
supervisor for Licadho, which runs a prison-monitoring project in the
Kingdom, cautioned that placing more detainees in Cambodia’s already
overcrowded prison system would have serious health implications for
inmates.
He
added that Licadho had found many prisoners suffer from respiratory
problems, sleep disorders, food poisoning and ailments caused by poor
sanitation.
“They
lack fresh air, and if an epidemic breaks out, it spreads quickly and
widely. Living in those stuffy cells leads to stress, which causes heart
and blood pressure problems,” he said.
“The increase [in the number of inmates] is not a good sign. A country with the rule of law does not imprison many people.”
Speaking
on condition of anonymity, a former prisoner who recently completed a
10-year stretch in one of the country’s most well-known jails said he
was incarcerated in a cell with about 70 other prisoners.
“It was cramped and hard to live in. It was very hot, and we got itchy and spread it to one another,” he said.
Savanea
admitted that the government would need to find more long-lasting
solutions to criminal behaviour if it was to end its overcrowding
problem.
“Our
country’s resources are still limited. But we need to think of other
measures we can take which are more economical and long-lasting,” he
said.
He also called on communities to do more to prevent and report crimes.

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