Investigating The Human Rights Conditons In Nigerian Prisons By Honour Happy-John Esq
INVESTIGATING THE HUMAN RIGHTS CONDITIONS IN NIGERIAN PRISONS
The breach of a criminal law usually result to the offender being tried in a court and if found guilty will be convicted and then sentenced to a certain jail term. However, the sentence may include fines, probation, community service or incarceration.
This article tends to investigate the basic rights of prisoners in Nigeria as enshrined in the constitution and various legal frameworks, guaranteeing basic rights like freedom from torture and access to legal representation. However, the bleak reality in Nigerian prisons cannot be over emphasized with situations such as overcrowding, poor sanitation, violence and disregard to human rights.
Basic Role of the Prison
The role of prison is to secure the confinement of those convicted of a crime punishable by a specified jail term. This protects the society from the actions of criminal on one hand, and also rehabilitate and reform prisoners to help reintegrate back into the society positively on the other hand.
The Nigerian Prison Service Staff Duties Manual listed the functions of the prison service to include; safe custody of prisoners, diagnosis, correction, training, rehabilitation of incarcerated offenders, and also, generation of funds for the government through prison farms and industries.
Prisons are also charged with the responsibility of producing inmates standing trial before the court of law as at when due if they are on remand and identify the causes of the prisoners’ anti-social conduct with the aim of reforming them.
In Nigeria, prison is an exclusive reserved of the Federal Government. Prisons are on the exclusive legislative list of the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria (As Amended). This means that only the National assembly has the power to legislate on matters relating to prison and to establish or manage prisons to the exclusion of the state governments.
Conditions of the Nigerian Prisons
The law provides that, every prisoner who is confined in a Nigerian prison is deemed to be in the legal custody of the superintendent in charge of that prison. Therefore, such person is subject to prison discipline and regulations, whether or not he is within the precincts of the prison.
However, the state of Nigerian prisons is substandard and in most cases dangerous and inhumane for inmates. It is obvious that the prisons in Nigeria are used as institutions for punishment. However, apart from excessive use of corporal punishment against the inmates, the conditions of these prisons are so deplorable. The prisons are overcrowded, poorly ventilated, while environmental sanitation is almost none existent in most of the prisons in Nigeria. Consequently the inmates are prone to various diseases which caused them poor health and even death in some cases due to poor medical facility in the prisons. The inmates are usually not on good diet and they are poorly fed without good clothing.
In Nigeria prisons, those awaiting trial and those convicted are often confined together in same facility. Other advanced countries usually have separate facilities such as jail for those awaiting trial or serving a very short term, while prisons are for convicted individuals. The lack of this distinction and separation has highly contributed to the issue of congestion faced by Nigerian prisons.
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