In the third of a series of articles
looking at policing in Nigeria, the BBC's Andrew Walker visits a prison in the
south-eastern city of Enugu where some people who have not committed any crime
are locked up for years on end:
"Welcome to the asylum!" says prison warder Iroha Uka,
cracking a broad and toothy grin.
We are in a section of Enugu Prison where the state prison
service keeps what it calls its "civil lunatics".
These are people who have been taken to court, either by the
police or their families, and a magistrate has jailed them - indefinitely,
sometimes for life. Usually they have committed no crime, or very minor ones
that may not merit a custodial sentence anywhere else in the world.
But the colonial-era law allows Nigerian courts to jail the
mentally ill.
Prisoners' Rehabilitation and Welfare Action (Prawa) is an
organisation working to get "civil lunatics" released from Nigeria's
jails.
They have had 54 mentally ill inmates released from Enugu Prison
since 2007.
But there are still hundreds of others in already overcrowded
jails all over the country.
Distress
Enugu's prison asylum is three tin-roofed sheds, split into
separate "wards", rooms filled with rows of bunk beds. They are hot
as ovens and dirty beyond belief.
Most of the day the people are locked inside because there are
not enough warders to prevent them escaping.
The men sleep on threadbare foam mattresses or on woven mats on
the concrete floor.
"None of these people will get any better here," says
nursing officer Michael Aroh.
"They need to be in a hospital environment, not a
prison."
A man approaches us and starts to yabber incoherently.
Everyone around him laughs as he struggles to form words that
mean anything.
The distress in his eyes is clear, but he cannot stop the
torrent of meaningless words that pour out of his mouth.
Suddenly he gains a grip of his language and says his name is
John and that he has been incarcerated for nine years.
"I'm [in] difficulties here, I need help! They are
detaining me here!" he says before slipping again into gobbledegook.
Mr Aroh says John is actually called Uguchukwu Onaga and he
suffers from schizophrenia.
"His mother got tired of him and stopped coming to visit
about four years ago."
Another inmate, 26-year-old Ifeanyi, claims he was tricked into
being sent to prison in February - possibly by his family.
A small boy brought him some marijuana and then the police
arrived and arrested him.
"I have a wife and three children. She is pregnant with
another," he says as his eyes well up with tears.
The police - not a doctor - recommended he should be in the
asylum for five months, but he is worried he will be forgotten.
"I don't know how I will get out of here."
Seven years
Edeh Ogbonnah Bertrand managed to get out. The 40-year-old was
in the asylum for seven years.
He says he was falsely accused of stealing some bottles of malt
drink by a shopkeeper, who had a police friend arrest him.
He was initially jailed in the regular prison, but was never
tried.
After several months he began to protest about his imprisonment
and he was moved to the asylum.
"The asylum is a kingdom of its own," he says.
"The stronger inmates make the rules. You must do what they
say or they will punish you.
"They make you do things like wash the floor or the toilet
or physically harm you."
Mr Bertrand was released after Prawa lobbied the state chief
justice to examine the status of prisoners in Enugu Prison.
The organisation is working with families of people with mental
illness trying to get them to take their relatives to psychiatric hospitals rather
than to the police.
'Show them love'
The prison service itself wants to clear their facilities of
civil lunatics as it says jails are already bursting at the seams with regular
criminals.
Enugu Prison has a capacity of 650, but has more than 1,000
people inside.
Prisons are also filled with people who are yet to be tried for
their alleged crimes.
"Civil lunatics are people that the society doesn't want to
be roaming around causing problems, unfortunately they are dumped in our
prisons," says Victoria Uzamaka, controller of Enugu Prison.
"We are trying to reach out to the families and to churches
to get them to take care of them, show them love. In the cases we have released
people have got better."
But Mr Bertrand says being rehabilitated is not an easy process.
"It's very difficult: Not having anything to do; getting
used to the environment; not having any money; not having a career."
He washes cars at a shop near the Prawa office, set up so
ex-prisoners can make a small living.
"Getting appointed with something to do is difficult."
Tags
Society
Let them go to lagos prisons too where people were keept in confinement for common misunderstarding and going to court without the court sitting they her given ajhonment upon ajhonment even to think of it efcc are another salvety masters who cannot charch the big theifs but always get happy to rope inocent people in the name of conspirace. Let us pray to God to touch the heart of the judicharies so that the future of most Nigeria youth will not be locked away in prison.
ReplyDeleteOga abi na madam DS ur grammer and spellings fit giv person fever ,take am easy abeg
DeleteI really wonder why and how people can just be locked in such inhabitable confinement for simple offences and the Politicians who the biggest criminals go score free.
ReplyDeleteI pity them bcause people outside are not even cared 4 talkless of prisoners,wen they refused to pay ASUU on money agreed wit them so don't expect dis federal government to catered 4 d poor instead d first lady has turn herself to god dat go around like mother of Nigeria n queen of us all which she is not can neva be
ReplyDelete