DOHA: There are over 10 million people in prisons worldwide, leading to prison overcrowding, and the problem has reached epidemic proportions in many countries, the ongoing 13th UN Congress on Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice was told yesterday.
Last year, some 77 countries were reported having a prison occupancy rate higher than 120 percent, in some cases as high as almost 400 percent, a senior official from the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) said at the UN Congress yesterday.
The eight-day event at Qatar National Convention Center ends tomorrow.
“Prison overcrowding can also be considered a symptom of a malfunctioning justice system, and the problems of overcrowding have to be dealt with by the prison administration, although the solutions are seldom within their reach,” Piera Barzano, Senior Regional Advisor of the Justice Section at UNODC, said during a side event at the Congress.
There are usually several reinforcing reasons that may lead to prison overcrowding, she continued, and such causes are not confined to the limits of criminal justice but extend to other spheres of state responsibility such as welfare policy, access to health services, education, and employment.
The UN Crime Congress, held every five years, brings together governments, policy-makers and experts to consider how best to integrate crime prevention and criminal justice into the wider UN agenda.
It also focuses on links between security and justice, and sustainable development.
Prison overcrowding refers to the occupancy rate and the official capacity of prisons. It refers to situations where the number of prisoners exceeds such official prison capacity. More specifically, the rate of overcrowding is defined as that part of occupancy rate above one hundred percent and it is usually understood that occupancy above 120 percent can be considered serious overcrowding.
The problem of prison overcrowding is very localised and extremely challenging, according to UNODC. It increases the risk of transmission of communicable diseases and poses an immense management challenge to prison administrations.
“Prison overcrowding impacts the quality of nutrition, sanitation, prisoner-activities, health care services and the care of vulnerable groups. It affects the physical, mental health and well-being of all prisoners. It generates prisoner tension, violence, exacerbates existing mental and physical health problems,” said Barzano.
Five years ago, at the 12th UN Crime Congress, in Brazil, a workshop was held on the ‘Strategies and Best Practices against Overcrowding in Correctional Facilities.’
“So here we are five years down the line,” continued Barzano, but there is still a growing recognition that one of the key obstacles to implementing the provisions of the standard minimum rules of the treatment of prisoners is overcrowding in prisons.
She also highlighted UNODC’s work with the Red Cross to publish a handbook on strategies to reduce overcrowding in prison. Calling it a practical tool for practitioners and policy-makers, she said the handbook is available on UNODC’s website in several languages.
“Overcrowding is a very serious humanitarian concern as it generates substandard and inhumane conditions. Tens of thousands of people are forced to live in congested accommodations with insufficient space to move, sit or sleep,” said Miroslawa Czerna of the International Committee of the Red Cross, who was also at the event.
“Being squeezed into cramped living quarters in appalling hygiene conditions and with no privacy makes the experience of being deprived of freedom distressful in normal circumstances exponentially worse. It erodes human dignity,” she added.
It also exacerbates tensions and endangers detainees, supervisors and security, Czerna emphasised.
THE PENINSULA
DOHA: Recognising the need of delegates to the 13th UN Congress on Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice for focused, relevant and up-to-date information on various topics, Qatar has established a ‘Knowledge Center’ at the venue of the Congress at Qatar National Convention Center (QNCC).
“The Knowledge Center has 26 international experts available to answer the queries of media personnel and participants as well,” said Major General Abdullah Yousuf Al Mal, Advisor to the Minister of Interior and Chairperson of the Preparatory Committee of the eight-day Congress being held from April 12 to 19.
Booths representing 17 institutes under UN and the United Nations Office on Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice are part of the Knowledge Center.
The United Nations Interregional Crime and Justice Research Institute Turin, Italy, United Nations Asia and Far East Institute for the Prevention of Crime and Treatment of Offenders, Tokyo, Japan, United Nations Latin American Institute for the Prevention of Crime and Treatment of Offenders, Sanjose, Costa Rica, United Nations African Institute for the Prevention of Crime and Treatment of Offenders, Kampala, Naif Arab University for Security Sciences, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, Australian Institute of Criminology, Canberra, International Center for Criminal Law Reform and Criminal Justice Policy, International Institute of Higher Studies in Criminal Science, Siracusa, Italy, National Institute of Justice, Washington DC, Raoul Wallenberg Institute of Human Rights and Humanitarian Law, Lund, Sweden, and International Scientific and Professional Advisory Council of the United Nations Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice Programme, Milan, Italy, are some of the important institutes are taking part in the Center.
Other institutes under the UN participating in the Knowledge Center are International Center for the Prevention of Crime, Montreal, Canada, Institute for the Security Studies, Pretoria, South Africa, Korean Institute Of Criminology, Seoul, South Korea, College for Criminal Law Science, Beijing, China, and European Institute for Crime Prevention and Control, Helsinki, Finland.
The subject matter experts can provide links to areas of specific interest on around 100 topics or sub-topics in the field of crime prevention and criminal justice. Delegates can ask questions about virtually anything and are directed to people or other resources to get the right answers.
THE PENINSULA