Inmates of the Ho Central Prisons have appealed to government to provide the Prisons with isolation centers in the wake of coronavirus pandemic.
They also appealed for minor offenders to be freed to make room for social and physical distancing in the cells.
The prisoners made the appeal when the Ho Municipal Chief Executive, Prosper Pi-Bansah donated assorted personal protective equipment, including an infrared thermometer gun, alcohol-based hand sanitizers, liquid soaps, and packs of tissue paper to the Prisons.
The inmates commended the MCE for the gesture and government for efforts at containing the pandemic and said it was time attention was given to "us too."
They said despite social distancing being a major protocol in preventing the spread of the virus, they continued to "sleep in groups of 70/80 in a cell with no isolation center for inmates who are very sick."
The prisoners said though people the world over were adapting to a new normal, it was business as usual for the inmates with "overcrowding everywhere. Overcrowding in cells, pavilion, everywhere..."
They also lamented on the sanitation situation in the Prisons and called for support.
The Ghana News Agency observed that the pavilion in the male prisons was jam-packed with only about five inmates wearing nose masks.
A few of them were also spotted eating together and others singing and shouting in close proximity.
Last month, the Prisons allegedly threatened to shut its gates to new inmates due to overcrowding.
The MCE urged inmates who had nose masks to wear them regularly to stop the spread of the disease, stressing, "nose masks are now the new pattern of dressing for our safety."
Mr Andrews Dzokoto, Deputy Director of Prisons, Volta Regional Commander of Prisons commended the MCE and the Assembly for the support.
He said the Ho Central Prisons, designed for 150 inmates had 423 prisoners with some sleeping under the beds of others.
Mr Dzokoto said the major challenge was overcrowding and that all inmates had nose masks and were regularly encouraged to wear them.
The MCE made similar donations to the Police, Immigration, and military in Ho.
He observed that some security officers were not observing the safety protocols, especially the wearing of nose masks, and said, it was affecting enforcement.
Mr Pi-Bansah said the Assembly was, therefore, forming a multi-taskforce to ensure all safety protocols were observed strictly to curb the spread of the virus.
Ho, Volta Regional capital as of May 31, 2020, had 23 COVID-19 positive cases out of 84 in the Region.
The Region is said to have also recorded two COVID-19 deaths and 35 recoveries at the end of May.
Latest Stories
-
2024 Election: NDC accuses NPP of printing fake ballot papers
5 mins -
A democracy that fails to solve its own problems is a questionable democracy – Dr Muhammad Suleiman
8 mins -
Our fight against corruption is more talk, less action – Mary Addah
15 mins -
CHRAJ report settles matters against Kusi Boateng – Lawyer
21 mins -
Growing dissatisfaction with democracy demands citizen-centered governance – Mavis Zupork Dome
24 mins -
Ghana’s Democracy: Choices, not elections will drive change – Benjamin Offei-Addo
29 mins -
PRESEC-Legon marks 86 years with launch of groundbreaking AI lab on November 30
33 mins -
Limited citizen participation threatens Ghana’s democracy – Prof. Kwesi Aning
42 mins -
Contractor storms basic school to drive out students from classroom, claiming government owes him
1 hour -
The quest for peaceful election: religious and traditional leaders should be part of election observers
1 hour -
NDC has better policies to boost economy through agricultural, oil sectors – Ato Forson
1 hour -
Yaw Ampofo Ankrah calls for Kurt Okraku and Executive Council to resign over AFCON failure
1 hour -
Coalition of teachers to boycott December election over unpaid salary arrears
1 hour -
Uphold ethics in fight against fraud – First National Bank CEO
1 hour -
CHRAJ recommends forensic audit of National Cathedral project
2 hours