Wednesday, April 06, 2022

THE HUG-A-CRIMINAL CROWD COMPLAINS ABOUT CONDITIONS IN OUR PRISONS ..... THEY SHOULD SPEND JUST ONE DAY LOCKED UP IN THE QUEZON CITY JAIL

Harrowing photos show overcrowded & disease-ridden Philippines prison housing British ‘mob boss’ 

 

 

 This photo taken on March 27, 2020 shows prison inmates in cramped 

 

This photo taken on March 27, 2020 shows prison inmates in cramped conditions at the crowded courtyard of the Quezon City jail in Manila

 

These chilling photos show the overcrowded and disease-ridden prison in the Philippines where a Brit mob boss is locked up.

Darren Wall, 44, was arrested with his wife Khanary Jane Abejo, 23, in a nightclub in Manila in March for allegedly brandishing a gun.

He was reportedly found with six grams of cocaine along with a 9 mm Beretta pistol – but Wall denies any wrongdoing and claims the gun wasn’t his.

Cops claim the East Londoner was the leader of a brutal gang operating in the capital’s notorious red-light district and want him behind bars for 18 years without parole over alleged drug dealings and extortion rackets.

Wall faces dying in Quezon City Jail, which is almost five times over capacity, leaving inmates stewing in their own filth.

The prison in the Philippines ‘ capital was built for just 800 but now has 3,800 inmates.

 

Inmates sleep on the ground of an open basketball court inside the Quezon City jail in Manila, Philippines.

Inmates sleep on the ground of an open basketball court inside the Quezon City jail at night in Manila.Inmates sleep on the ground of an open basketball court inside the Quezon City jail at night in Manila


Lags sleep in shifts on stairways, a basketball court floor and hammocks fashioned from old blankets in the six-decade-old jailhouse.

The inmates can be seen washing themselves in the same water they clean their clothes, right next to where they cook in the overcrowded jail.

But some joy manages to break through the squalor and cramped conditions as they take part in group dancing competitions in yellow uniforms on the cracked open air basketball court.

The jail houses prisoners awaiting trial and one former inmate has returned after studying criminal justice in the USA.

Raymund Narag says when he was 20-years-old he was falsely accused of murder and spent seven years in a cell with 30 other men which was built for just five.

During his time behind bars Raymund lived on a diet of dried fish which he claims left him on the edge of starvation.

 

There are 3,800 inmates at the jail, which was built six decades ago to house 800.There are 3,800 inmates at the jail, which was built six decades ago to house 800


Now a Doctor of Criminal Justice having studied at Michigan State University, Dr Narag is now an assistant professor at the Southern Illinois University.

He returned to his former cage to study how Filipino prisons can be reformed.

Talking of his life behind bars, he has said: “I saw firsthand the intricacies of managing a crowded, underfunded, undermanned prison institution.”

Dr. Narang has said the food is not only inadequate but inmates can often find rusty nails and cockroaches leaving it inedible.

It is also served at irregular intervals at odd times of the day, making it impossible for them to gain any sense of routine to cope with the squalor.

The horrific conditions can cause serious health difficulties for the lags which can cause nasty rashes and boils to erupt on their skin.

Some of the men are even said to have suffered strokes as a result of sleeping in a squatted position.

Dr Narag said: “Inmates are prone to contagious diseases because of the poor living conditions in their cells.

“They sleep in overcrowded, poorly ventilated cells. The supply of potable water is very limited. Food rations have inadequate nutritional content. Sick and healthy inmates are grouped in the same cells.”

“Every month in Quezon City Jail, around two to five inmates die of illness.”

The crushing boredom and lack of sleep also leads to inmates developing depression and other mental illnesses.

Dr. Narag said his seven years of hell in Quezon City made him determined to talk about the horrors he had witnessed behind bars.

 

Prisoners crowd into any available space to rest inside their overcrowded cage.Prisoners crowd into any available space to rest inside their overcrowded cage


He charted his experience of doing time in a book titled “Freedom and death inside the City Jail”.

In it he describes the squalid conditions and describes the prevalence of bribery, corruption and torture which riddles the prison system.

He says officers have been known to force prisoners to hang like bats from bars for hours, suffocate them with plastic and even electrocute and pour hot candle wax on inmates’ genitals.

1 comment:

Trey said...

A foreign prison is a bad place to be.