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By Ciaran Ryan

Moneyweb: Journalist & Host of Moneyweb Crypto Podcast


Judgment paints damning picture of prison life at Sun City

Prisoners have won their legal battle about mealtimes and other conditions at Johannesburg's biggest prison facility.


Following a complaint that Sun City prisoners in Johannesburg were waiting 20 hours a day between meals, the High Court in Johannesburg last Friday ordered the department of correctional services (DCS) to ensure that meals are properly spaced through the day. There may be no more than 14 hours between supper and breakfast.

GroundUp previously reported the case. The judgment goes beyond prisoners’ rights to meals. Judge SM Wentzel paints a damning picture of a department repeatedly flouting the law and court orders. The prison population is double the capacity of the prison. It is designed to hold 1,339 inmates, but actually holds 2,812.

Prisoners at Sun City in Johannesburg took the Department of Correctional Services to court, represented themselves, and won. Photo: Ciaran Ryan

Prisoners at Sun City complained that they were being served lunch and supper at about 1pm each day because of staff shortages – the result of a labour dispute. The prison has approval for 710 staff, but only 440 have been filled.

“This means that the DCS works on a skeleton staff who are not able to handle the task of serving supper in the evening as there is only one person who is on duty at night,” says the judgment.

The DCS argued that it was substantially in compliance of the Correctional Services Act, even though lunch and supper were served together, as prisoners could take bread back to their cells for later consumption.

Philip Lekgau, one of the prisoners who brought the case, says the judgment is a victory for prisoners’ rights.

“We will now monitor how the department complies with the order, but so far we are satisfied that justice has been done.”

The court order also forces the DCS to account to the prisoners for profits earned from the staff canteen since 2011. Some 5% of these profits are supposed to go to prisoners for recreational equipment, but this was stopped in 2011.

The DCS has 60 days to file a status report describing the steps taken to comply with the order. The prisoners can respond to the DCS report within 15 days thereafter.

It’s notable that one of the prisoners, Sifiso Ndlovu, now on parole, represented the prisoners in court.

The judgment offers some interesting insights into the realities of prison life.

Quotes from the judgment

“It constitutes cruel and inhumane punishment to lock prisoners up for 16 hours of a 24-hour day in order to suit the shifts of prison staff. Alternative arrangements should, and must, be implemented,” says the judgment.

The judge also stated that she was impressed by the dignity and eloquence of the prisoner who appeared before her, and the fact that the prisoners asked for the most meagre of things, such as three meals a day served at the appropriate time, the right to have family and friends bring them delicacies from the prison canteen, and for 5% of the profits for the canteen so that they can purchase recreational equipment.

“Our prison system is designed, not only to punish, but to rehabilitate. I find a notion that prisoners, because they have committed offences, need not be afforded proper dignity and humane treatment abhorrent. We are a society with human rights for all as a cornerstone of our Constitution, which warrants the protection of the courts,” Wentzel wrote.

“I find it equally distasteful that the DCS can rely upon a labour dispute with its staff as an excuse not to provide the prisoners with the rights afforded to them under the [Correctional Services] Act. I do not accept that there are insufficient funds, pending the outcome of the labour dispute, to employ casual staff to enable the prisoners to be served their evening meal.

“It is not a prisoner’s problem that the prisons are overcrowded and under-resourced. It is the government’s duty to ensure that prisoners’ rights guaranteed in the Constitution and in the Act are protected and enforced. I accordingly do not accept the DCS’s argument that it is not possible that it comply with the explicit requirements set forth in section 8 of the Act. It has known of the problem for years and has done nothing about it and it is now time that it did.”

The DCS has faced similar complaints from prisoners in the past, and each time offered the excuse of staff shortages and prison overcrowding.

“It is now high time that these challenges be addressed and I propose making a structural interdict to ensure they are addressed to ensure that prisoners’ rights to three meals a day, and to a hot meal of meat and vegetables in the evening in order to sustain them until breakfast the following morning, are enforced,” she wrote.

On the matter of the 5% profits from the staff canteen, which was stopped in 2011, the prison procedure manual obligates the DCS to pay this for prisoners’ recreation and sports. The prisoners asked for this to be reinstated and to be given a full accounting of the outstanding profits due to them. The DCS challenged the standing of the prisoners to claim this profit, but the judge did not buy it.

“This is utterly disgraceful and I intend to require the DCS to provide a full and proper explanation to the court for this.”

The judge found that although the prisoners’ rights to the 5% profit is not a constitutional right, it is an adjunct to their rights to humane prison treatment.

Republished from GroundUp. Read the original story.

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