Scanners, cellphone detectors for SA jails

26/04/2016 Materials used to make prison attire made by offenders at the Boksburg Correctional Services. Today was the Boksburg Correctional Services Media Tour and Certificate ceremony. Offenders were awarded for "Skills To Furnish" training courses at the Prison, Boksburg. Picture : Simone Kley

26/04/2016 Materials used to make prison attire made by offenders at the Boksburg Correctional Services. Today was the Boksburg Correctional Services Media Tour and Certificate ceremony. Offenders were awarded for "Skills To Furnish" training courses at the Prison, Boksburg. Picture : Simone Kley

Published May 3, 2016

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Parliament – Various technologies, including cellphone detection devices, were being rolled out at the country’s jails to stamp out criminality and collusion between inmates and officials, Justice and Correctional Services Minister Michael Masutha announced on Tuesday.

“We have conducted a number of raids, cleaning our facilities of contraband items, yet more is still needed. It is for this reason that we are now installing cellphone detection technology,” Masutha told journalists ahead of his budget vote in Parliament.

“We have completed staff training in seven correctional centres, and we are now dealing with the big five. In addition, the Department of Health has granted us a licence to install body cavity scanners. Installation has already started in Johannesburg, St. Albans, Pollsmoor and Kgosi Mampuru II.”

Correctional Services director general Zach Modise said it was hoped the cellphone detection system would go a long way to prevent inmates from offending while behind bars.

“These cellphones are a menace to us, creating a number of problems where victims of crime and witnesses are being called by these offenders from our facilities, intimidating and threatening witnesses … but also it is being used to proliferate crime in our facilities where smuggling between officials and offenders is then being heightened,” said Modise.

Modise said a decision had been made to also install CCTV cameras inside the prisons to detect inmates attacking each other.

“What we really want to really do is to intervene and make sure that those that are in our facilities are not being threatened, are not being assaulted, and are not being abused,” he said.

“We have found that at the bigger institutions where we have remand admission centres, like here at Pollsmoor where we are having trouble of offenders being brutalised by others in one way or another and therefore we would like to get to have that information then we’ll be able to also deal with theses offenders.”

African News Agency

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