Ghana is on the right track towards improving conditions in its prisons, Amnesty International Ghana has observed.
It said since 2011, the government had consistently worked towards
addressing the living conditions of prisoners in the country. "This is
commendable even though there is still a lot to be done," the Director
of Amnesty International Ghana, Mr Lawrence K. Amesu, said in an
interview with the Daily Graphic.
He said, for instance, that the Ankaful prison had been completed and
some prisoners had been transferred from the Nsawam Medium Security
Prison to that place, thereby decongesting the Maximum Security Prison.
Mr Amesu commended the decision by the government to increase the
daily feeding fee of prison inmates from GH¢ 0.60 to GH¢1.80 per inmate,
saying that needed to be commended though still inadequate, considering
the cost of living in the country presently.
"Also, the President, on July 1, 2013, as part of the country's
Republic Day celebration, granted amnesty to 670 prisoners, and for us,
this demonstrated the President's willingness to address concerns in our
prisons," he said.
He was particularly happy that Ghana had opened its doors to the UN
Rapporteur General to visit prisons in the country and the government's
readiness to address the recommendations that followed the visit.
"We think the government should be commended, in the first place for
allowing the Rapporteur General to come here to visit our prisons and
secondly for agreeing to look into the recommendations coming out from
the visit," he said.
Alternative Dispute Resolution
Touching on Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR), Mr Amesu said it
was the main answer to the overcrowding in the country's prisons.
He said Ghanaians should not always rush to the law court, contending
that some cases could be addressed through the ADR instead of the law
court, which did not promote reconciliation.
Mr Amesu said, currently, there were a number of people on remand,
awaiting trial, some of whom had been in such a situation for over six
years and pointed out that the situation increased up the number of
inmates.
Some of the cases, he said, could have been easily resolved through the ADR.
Justice For All programme
The Justice For All programme is an initiative under which the
justices visit prisons to examine cases of remanded prisoners during
which some of them are discharged to go home.
Mr Amesu was of the view that the situation in the prisons demanded
that the Justice for All Programme should be encouraged and intensified
to cover all prisons in the country.
He was not happy that such a laudable programme was concentrated only
in the cities and said he was looking forward to seeing it expanded to
all parts of the country.
Death penalty
On the Death sentence, Mr Amesu said Amnesty International Ghana had been campaigning to get it expunged.
He said it was commendable that for over 20 years now, nobody had
been executed in Ghana, but the mere fact that it was still in the
statute books of the country remained a concern.
Mr Amesu recalled that the removal of the death penalty from the
statutes was part of the recommendations of the Constitutional Review
Committee, and was hopeful that with the steps being taken, including
the setting up of the implementation committee, it would be eventually
expunged.
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