By a Ghana Country Reports on Human Rights Practices released by the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor USA in March 8, 2006 indicated that much of the prison population are held in buildings that were originally old colonial forts or abandoned public or military buildings, with poor ventilation and sanitation, dilapidated construction, and limited space. Overcrowding contributes to a high prevalence of communicable diseases. Medical facilities are inadequate, and the prisons are supplied only the most basic medicines. In certain facilities female prisoners in police cells are only separated by a few feet and are within the reach of male prisoners. In the Accra Central police cells, female prisoners are kept in a small vestibule, only separated from men by a gate. The law stipulates that regardless of the offense, female convicts should be tested for pregnancy upon incarceration, and that pregnant convicts should be held in a facility where their health needs could be met. To compound all these problems all these, prisoners are feed on a meager amount. At the end of 2006 a prisoner in Ghana is feed on an amount of seven thousand cedis a day. That is approximately $ .68. This is seen as upward adjustment since as of February 2001 the prisoners' daily food allowance was increased to approximately $.35 (2,500 cedis), bringing the total daily allowance to $.55 (3,900 cedis). In August 2001 the Director General asked the Government to increase the daily food allowance to at least $.57 (4,000 cedis) of which they did.
The serious issue to be determined is whether or not this amount is enough to satisfy the nutritional needs of a prisoner. Thus can $ .68 provide three square meals for the average prisoner?
Good nutrition means eating enough food and the right kind of food for the body to grow healthy and fight diseases. The cheapest foods in Ghana are mostly in the form of Carbohydrates like yam, cassava rice amongst others .None of these will cost less than four thousand cedis ($ .57) in Ghana. The inference from this is that no prisoner can be feed three times a day with these food stuffs as it will exceed his quota granted to him by the state. If the cheapest commodities cannot be obtained with this amount, then with respect to protein foods, like milk amongst others, a prisoner need not dream about it during the period of his incarceration. For this is seen as the food for the higher class.
If this is the situation at hand then the following issues must be considered without a spectacle of bias since they are prisoners.
It is sometimes amazing that a country in which about 60% of its population being farmers should still complain of nutritional problems. The country has a vast majority of its land being fertile. The government should adopt the “OPERATION FEED YOURSELF PROGRAMME” concept of General Acheampong for our prisoners in order to supplement the meager amount used in catering for their welfare.
This can be feasible as by law the government can compulsorily acquire a land meant for such a purpose. The prison activities favors such a system as prisoners happen to be a group of individuals who have a systematized time schedule and there can be fixed times for going to the farms. Such produce from the farms can also be sold or exchanged for other produce that the prisoners are lacking.
Furthermore the government should put in place a Programme in which it will buy the excess produce of these prisoners and even stretched to cover ex-convicts who will engaged in farming after their sentence. For a start a quota can be given to them on this school feeding programme. This will help in raising money for these prisoners thereby cutting down the crime rate for the major cause of crime is POVERTY.
One major issue confronting every good effort is that of funding. Is a basic fact that the majority of prisoners are the youth. The Government of Ghana new agenda is to encourage the youth into Agriculture. It has also been established that the government has pushed not less than two billion cedis for the National Youth Employment Programme. Without any bias or scoring political points some of these amounts can be pushed to start such a programme.
There is also the need for the government to reconsider the amount of money it spends on a prisoner and clear the perception that providing good conditions for prisoners will make more people commit crimes due to the economic hardships in the country. Check whether anybody wants to be restricted in his freedom of choice or movement. There should be a scheme to offer aid to our prisoners through voluntary service
The rights of Prisoners in Ghana have been trivialized. This is due to the society perception that they are individuals who have been condemned. This can be traced to the traditional values of the Ghanaian society. In ages past people who committed crimes were considered to have brought calamity to the land and were sometimes severed from the rest of the community. Parents prevented their children from marrying from families who had criminal record.
The civil society should bear in mind that development has made our society to change drastically. In modern Ghana nobody can be ostracized in stricto sensu from a community. Not all inmates are guilty of the offences for some are on remand with others being victims of circumstances. It should therefore be seen as a responsibility of the societies especially families of prisoners and the churches to help in such a cause.
Argument has also been advanced by both politicians and civil society alike that the government has not finished catering for the ordinary citizens how much more prisoners. In other words till the society is well catered for the prisoners should not sniff about their problems. When the issue of human rights is brought up there is no distinction between a greater human being and a lesser one. For human beings are all equal in the sight of the law and God.
People also tend to forget that the so called lesser humans are the one who derail our efforts in life. Since nobody is born with the word “criminal” written on the forehead and the fact that the Lombroso Theory has been dismantled, it is the environmental factors that makes one a criminal, there is the need for the society to take particular attention in extricating criminals from their criminal ways.
Ghanaians need not make a choice of ignoring prisoners or creating harsh conditions for them for in either way they are now part of us and we should look at ways of reforming them.