Apart from the ever increasing presence of remand prisoners in the country's jails, the congestion in the prisons is getting worse as more ex-convicts are returning behind bars by the day.
According to The Mirror, its sources at the Ghana Prisons Service point out that the country's 45 prisons were about 60 percent overcrowded, while more discharged prisoners were returning to jail because society continued to reject them and the ex-convicts continually went back to the crimes that first sent them to jail.
The rate of recidivism (re-offending) almost doubled over a one-year period, rising from 5.5 percent in 2004 to 8.2 percent in 2005, implying that more ex-convicts returned to prison in 2005 than in 2004. The Service was yet to publish the rate of recidivism for last year, 2006.
As captured in the 2005 annual report of the Prisons Service, "the rehabilitation efforts of the service through the purposeful impartation of trade skills to prison inmates should facilitate their smooth reintegration after discharge".
"However, the stigma and society's unpreparedness to embrace ex-convicts aggravate their already psychologically broken confidence. To their minds, the better option is to go back to where they are accepted - the prison," the report noted.
To curb the rising incidence of ex-convicts returning to prison, the Prisons Service suggested the establishment of what it termed, mid-way centres to provide post-imprisonment rehabilitation programmes to ex-convicts.,
Generally, in Ghana more people are being locked up in jail. For instance in December 2005, there were 662 more people in prison than at the same time the previous year. The average daily lock-up of 12,371 reflected a 5.5 increase over the 2004 daily lock-up of 11, 726.
In a related development, The Mirror said HIV/AIDS remains the number one killer of prisoners in Ghana.
It said twenty-seven out of the 111 deaths recorded were the result of AIDS. Tuberculosis, malaria, cardiac (heart) attack and anaemia also sent 16, 12, 10 and 8, prisoners respectively, to their graves.
Source: The Mirror
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:
Latest Stories
-
4-year-old cured leper walks again after Bawumia sponsored her special surgery
3 hours -
Dorcas Affo-Toffey, earns dual Master’s Degrees in Energy, Sustainable Management, and Business Administration
3 hours -
T-bills auction: Government got GH¢21.5bn in November 2024, lower than target
7 hours -
Ghana to return to single digit inflation in quarter one 2026
7 hours -
Panama’s president calls Trump’s Chinese canal claim ‘nonsense’
7 hours -
Manmohan Singh, Indian ex-PM and architect of economic reform, dies at 92
7 hours -
Government is not been fair to WAEC – Clement Apaak on delay to release WASSCE results
7 hours -
Bayer Leverkusen’s Jeremie Frimpong donates to Osu Children’s Home in Ghana
10 hours -
GPL 2024/25: Heart of Lions beat Young Apostles to go three points clear
11 hours -
Dance battles, musical chairs light up Joy FM Party in the Park
11 hours -
Kwabena Kwabena, Camidoh, Kwan Pa Band, others rock Joy FM Family Party in the Park
11 hours -
GPL 2024/2025: Aduana beat struggling Legon Cities
11 hours -
GPL 2024/25: Bechem United fail to honor match against Holy Stars
12 hours -
Cooking competition takes centrestage at Joy FM Family Party In The Park
12 hours -
Album review: ‘Wonder’ by Nana Fredua-Agyeman Jnr
14 hours