'Slow puncture' death sentences for prisoners

Published Nov 20, 2002

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By Ben Maclennan

Prison gangs are using HIV infection by rape as punishment in a grim ritual known as "slow puncture", the Jali Commission heard on Wednesday.

The director of the office of the judicial inspectorate of prisons, Gideon Morris, said gang tribunals would sentence errant gang members, or prisoners who refused to join them, to be raped by HIV-positive inmates.

Sometimes the rape would be carried out by one person, sometimes by several.

"They give him a 'slow puncture', meaning he will die over a period of time," Morris told the commission.

He had first heard of the punishment about six months ago in the Western Cape and on the East Rand.

"It's a new phenomenon," he said.

If that inmate did then die in prison of Aids-related conditions, it would be recorded as a natural death.

He also said the number of prisoners who died of natural causes rose 528 percent from 186 in 1995, to 1169 last year, an increase considerably higher than the 38 percent increase in prison population.

"The poor hygienic conditions caused by overcrowding are placing high demands on the immune systems of prisoners which seem to contribute to this escalation in the number of natural deaths," he said.

"Even the most healthy person would find it difficult to remain healthy if he or she was locked up in some of these prisons."

Added to this was the increased number of HIV and Aids prisoners admitted from outside prison, he said.

But replying to a question from the commission's leader of evidence, Vas Soni, he said it was difficult to say whether Aids was the largest cause of death. - Sapa

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