Showing posts with label Jail condition. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jail condition. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Cambodian inmates rarely attend own appeals

24 April 2012
ABC Radio Australia

A human rights group in Cambodia says inmates appealing their convictions almost never get to be in court to help defend their cases.

That's due to a lack of transport, money and prison staff.

The result says the LICADHO report is the denial of a fundamental right that's recognised internationally but also under Cambodia's legal system.

The human right's group says there's been little change in the last two years and it may be time to consider more radical approaches such as buses converted into travelling appeals courts.

Presenter: Liam Cochrane
Speaker: Jeff Vise, a consultant on prison issues for LICADHO

VISE: Well it's a combination of several factors that it could be. Initially there's basically no inmate transporation system available for long distances. So you have prisoners in the provincial prisons which in some cases are five, six, seven, eight hours away from Phnom Penh where the only appeals court is located, and there is a lack of transport vehicles and a lack of funding for fuel, and in the end the transfer's just doesn't get done, that's the main problem.

COCHRANE: And describe the scale of the problem, when you say the transfers don't get done, I mean what percentage or how many don't get done?

VISE: That's actually difficult to say. Most prison directors that our researchers talked to put it almost in absolute terms like it never happens except for the rare case where it may because the court pushes a little harder to get it done or if the inmate actually pays his or her own way.

LICADHO's prison report and press release


https://www.box.com/s/da0a9de2cd2655eec32b


https://www.box.com/s/14eca01ee2202dec21c0

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

Extortion in NE Prison Leaves Spirits ‘Broken’

By Chiep Mony, VOA Khmer
Original report from Phnom Penh
15 January 2008


Detainees in a prison in the northeast province of Mondolkiri are being held in poor conditions far beyond legal limits, raising suspicions of corruption, a prison official said Tuesday.

Prisoners who can’t bribe their way out of detention grow sick as they are held without trial, and “their spirit is broken,” the official told VOA Khmer, on condition of anonymity.

At least two women and five men are serving time without trial, some as long as one year, in the Mondolkiri facility, the official said.

Charges range from theft to murder to adultery, the official said.

“There are many people, and they are sick,” the official said. “They have not been sentenced. Their spirit is broken.”

Each person is asked to pay at least $1,500” to be released the official continued. “The smallest amount, $1,500.”

Mondolkiri Prison Chief An Kimleng dismissed the allegations.

“Fines” for detainees prior to trial dates are possible, he said, but “the prison chief has no right to put people on trial.”

Em Veasna, a human rights worker in Mondolkiri, said such cases of extortion were likely, especially if news of them was trickling out.

Mondolkiri Court Chief Lou Sousambath could not be reached for comment Tuesday.

Monday, September 17, 2007

Rejection of Heng Pov’s torture information

Monday, September 17, 2007
Everyday.com.kh
Translated from Khmer by Socheata

The lawyer of Heng Pov, the former Phnom Penh city police commissioner, has rejected information reporting that Heng pov is tortured in jail, and that the UN human rights office wants to intervene in this case. Nou Chantha, Heng Pov’s lawyer, said on 15 September, that the information reporting that Heng Pov is tortured in jail is not true. He said that the UN human rights office indeed wants to visit Heng Pov, however, the prison director does not dare make the decision to allow the UN office to meet Heng Pov, following a request made by the UN human rights office to the director of the Phnom Penh municipal court. On 02 September, the prison director sent a letter to the UN office informing that Heng Pov is incarcerated in a special cell under surveillance for his safety, and that he is in good health. His relatives are authorized to come and meet him normally, they are not prevented from visiting him.

Saturday, April 21, 2007

Education classes give convicts a second chance

By Sue-Lyn Moyle
Phnom Penh Post, Issue 16 / 08, April 20 - May 3, 2007

At first glance the gaunt face of Mean Soket, 49, appears full of wisdom. He dispenses advice as he patiently demonstrates to a young apprentice the tools of his mechanical trade. But a closer look into his sombre expression and deep-set eyes provides a window into an untold life.

Soket just spent his last 12 years in prison.

In the time since he was incarcerated in Kampong Cham's Tropaing Plong Prison in 1994, Cambodia became an unfamiliar land to Soket.

While he was inside, HIV/AIDS became a concern, motorbikes began swarming the roadways and cities transformed overnight. Soket emerged in December 2006 into a fast, noisy, urbanized society, without job skills and unable to provide for his wife and children.

To prepare for freedom, Soket joined pre-release classes organized by the Prison Fellowship of Cambodia (PFC). Upon release he continued his education with a six-month mechanic's apprenticeship at Blue Gate House, a reintegration project run by PFC.

"After I was released from prison, I wanted to look after my family and start a business in a legal way, in order to be a good father to my children," Soket said. "My future career will be as a motorbike repairman."

BAD REPUTATION
Often accused in the past of human rights' abuses, the Cambodian prison system is now receiving praise from NGOs with prison-based programs for its cooperation in providing inmates new opportunities.

"The prison system has really opened up to allow groups like us to do some really good work," said Adam Hutchinson, co-project leader of Blue Gate House.

Characterized by a large, dark blue front gate, Blue Gate House is a drop-in center for ex-prisoners seeking assistance during the three months after release. Apprenticeships in mechanics, small business loans, and help reuniting families are some of the services provided by the center. Released prisoner's transportation costs to and from the center are paid for and temporary accommodation is provided.

Although the Prison Fellowship is a faith-based organization, Linda Chisholm, executive director of PFC, says their help is offered indiscriminately.

"Our role is simply to take education in [to the prison] and give the prisoner a chance for reintegration that gives them a chance to work and raise their self esteem," she said.

Education programs run by the PFC include classes in computing, mechanics, English, and sewing. Other aid programs help to meet nutritional and sanitation needs of inmates.

Hutchinson says the key to the success of the reintegration services at Blue Gate House is the support given by the prison authority to conduct meetings that build rapport between the inmates and social workers while they are still serving their sentences.

"Unless we have access before they are released, people often don't know about us. They don't trust us and they don't come here. If we are able to build relationships before they come out, then they are more likely to come to Blue Gate House," Hutchinson said.

The importance of gaining trust from the prisoners is stressed by Chat Sineang, director of the CC2 section at Prey Sar Prison, a block housing only minors and female prisoners with their young children.

Sineang wishes to see a school built nearby the prison for the children of incarcerated mothers, but he sees the mother's lack of confidence in the prison system as an obstacle.

"They think their children will be treated badly," he said.

He said further collaboration is needed with the PFC, which is considering plans to convert a nearby house into a primary school. If they work together, he says, it may be possible to gain the trust of the mothers and explain that their children will be well-provided for.

CHILD PRISONERS
Children below the age of six often live with their mothers in Cambodia's prisons. NGO and prison officials say caring for children is difficult as funding is not provided because they are technically not prisoners.

The Ministry of Interior (MoI) allocates 1,500 riel per prisoner per day - an increase from 1,000 riel in August 2006 - to cover prisons' operational costs, including food, staff salaries, utilities, administration and sanitation, according to local human rights group Licadho. The national poverty line was calculated by the World Bank to be 1,826 riel per person per day in 2004.

Responding to the extra nutrition and development requirements of mothers and their children, Licadho started the Adopt-A-Prison project in 2003. Facilitating support from 13 individuals and organisations, the project provides extra food, toiletries and medical assistance in 10 of Cambodia's 25 prisons, with the next project phase to address a lack of education opportunities for young children.

Seeing the project as a simple, cost-effective way to distribute aid, Jacques Baekart, the minister-counsellor of the embassy of the Order of Malta to Cambodia, often hand delivers food and essentials directly to women and children twice a month in CC2 and Takmau prisons.

"It brings a human touch to the program," Baekart said. "These kids usually have no access to food other than the meager ones given by the prison to the mothers ... and to see the joy on the face of the kids and women is more than enough to justify what we are doing."

Chin Lyda, prison project leader of Licadho, said a lack of prison funding not only inhibits access to sufficient nutrition and medical attention but does not adequately provide for a child's future development beyond the prison walls.

"If they can at least learn to read they can increase their education and future prospects," he said.

THE LIFE AFTER
Cambodia's prisons have a reputation for harsh conditions, including overcrowding and a lack of food. Regular contact and assistance from poorer families is obstructed by corruption, despite prison procedures stating each prisoner is entitled to at least one weekly visit of one hour.

"It is a big obstacle for the families to visit prisoners," said Lyda.

According to Lyda, poorer families already struggle to pay transportation costs to the prison and buy extra food for the prisoner, then they must bribe prison guards to get inside the prison for visits.

"The guards aren't paid enough, so this way the prisons receive extra funds to be managed," Lyda said. "But there is no law stating that guards can charge money - it is corruption."

In a 2001 prison report, Licadho found that visiting a prisoner costs an average 23,000 riel, about $5.75, in payments to prison staff. Prison guards make an average of $50 a month. In 2004 guards made an average $25 per month.

The isolation from family combined with long sentences can leave NGOs with a formidable task in reuniting families.

"One of the really terrific things they do here is find people, they find mums and dads who burst into tears when they know that their son is alive," said Chisholm about Blue Gate House.

The need for development programs is emphasized by the staggering number of released inmates who approached Blue Gate House. An estimated 20 percent of inmates released in 2005 showed up on Blue Gate's doorstep.

"I was thinking we'd be lucky to reach five percent for such a young organisation," Hutchinson said.