|
Today In History |
|
On September 8, 1900
| |
6,000 killed when a hurricane and tidal wave strikes Galveston, Texas
|
|
|
|
|
KHARTOUM, 9 Nov 2005 (IRIN) - Omjameal Marshue Mohammed was 18 when she
was convicted of selling marijuana and sentenced to 20 years in
Omdurman Prison, Sudan's largest women's prison located near the
Sudanese capital, Khartoum.
Released recently after a judge
reduced her sentence by a half because she was a young first offender,
Mohammed, explained that selling marijuana was one of the few options
she had to support her two children.
"My husband and I were
living in Mayo camp [for internally displaced persons (IDPs), 20 km
south of Khartoum], and he made very little money from his day job. We
had two children and so we both began selling hashish to make ends
meet."
There are currently an estimated 1,000 women in the facility, the
majority of whom are serving sentences for brewing and selling alcohol,
an illegal substance in Sudan since the country adopted Islamic Sharia
law in 1983.
According to Arafaa Sheikh Musa, the
secretary-general of Al Manar Volunteer Organisation - an NGO that
assists and educates women in prison - the business of brewing alcohol
and selling drugs developed in the wake of the civil war.
"More
than 80 percent of those imprisoned for brewing alcohol or selling
drugs are internally displaced southern Sudanese. They have families,
have had to leave their homes, are living in camps and have no other
means of generating income," Musa said.
On 9 January, the
Comprehensive Peace Agreement brought an end to the 21-year north-south
civil war that left 2 million dead and more than 4 million displaced.
Most IDPs have yet to return to their homes and depend on petty trade –
in anything from clothes to alcohol - to feed their families.
Petty
trade, however, is prohibited under Section 20 of the Khartoum State
Public Order Act, which was established by the Sudanese government in
1996. The punishment for anyone convicted of violating the act is a
fine, a possible jail term and 25 lashes.
Under Khartoum State
criminal law, the penalty for selling alcohol can include a fine of
20,000 to 100,000 Sudanese dinars (US $80-$400), a prison sentence of
15 days to 20 years and 40 to 80 lashes, depending on prior convictions
and the nature of the trade.
"The women cannot afford the fines,
so they will have to stay in prison double the amount of time they were
initially given in order to work [for] the money that they owe," Musa
explained.
Raising families in prison
In January
2004, an Al Manar study of Omdurman Prison found that 70 percent of the
women were serving short-term sentences of 15 days to six months and 30
percent were being held for a period of one to 20 years.
A
result of lengthy prison sentences is that the children of inmates face
abandonment unless they go to prison with their mothers.
"These
women are the caretakers of their children. The fathers are not around
or working or have died during the war. So when the women are jailed,
their children suffer," Musa observed.
At the time of her
arrest, Mohammed had two daughters. The eldest stayed with a friend,
but Zahra, who was only seven months old, went with her mother to
prison. They shared a bed in a cell with 20 other women and their
children for 10 years.
According to Musa, Sudanese authorities
allow the children to stay in prison with their mothers because they
realised that the children had no one else to care for them. The
facility, however, is not properly equipped to care for all the
children living there.
"The prison authorities are not
responsible for the feeding or health necessities of the children, and
the meals distributed are only enough to feed the mother," Musa
explained.
The assessment by Al Manar in 2004 indicated that
between 150 and 300 children were living inside the prison, of whom 88
percent were under age two. Because the majority of these children came
from camps and squatter areas, 95 percent were not vaccinated against
preventable diseases and - at the time - 77 percent were malnourished.
"A
couple of years back the mortality rate of the children was so high,
there were four to six children dying from malnutrition a month," Musa
noted. She added that children were also succumbing to preventable
diseases because there were no drugs available inside the prison.
Intervention
To
address the problem, Al Manar -- with support from the UN Children’s
Fund (UNICEF) and other organisations -- started a feeding programme
and a drug clinic to provide the children with two meals a day and
vaccinate them against preventable diseases.
"The malnutrition
rate is now almost zero percent. We had only 13 children die in 2004 -
from an outbreak of measles, not from malnutrition," Musa said.
Al
Manar also offers legal assistance to inmates, writing appeals,
providing them with lawyers free of charge and conducting workshops to
inform the women of their rights and certain by-laws that may help to
reduce individual sentences.
"The women can't afford lawyers,
and even if they could they do not know their rights because they've
never been educated in them. So they plead guilty, even when they are
not. By the time we get to them to help, it is already to late to make
an appeal," Musa noted.
Mohammed maintained that if she had
known her legal rights before she was arrested she might not have had
to carry out a 10-year sentence.
"I had no money and no house,
so I couldn't use anything as collateral to pay for a lawyer. I had to
take whatever sentence was given. If I'd known my rights before my
arrest, I would have been able to defend myself differently," she said.
Al Manar also teaches women how to make handicrafts and other items, to provide an alternative to illegal petty trade.
Now
that she had been released, Mohammed noted that these new skills would
enable her to support her children. "In the courses I learned how to
dye cloth and now I can make many wonderful and useful things. I want
to start a business to sell these things so that I can make money to
take care of my family," she said.
Musa pointed out that despite
their interventions, most of the women were IDPs and lacked the money
to establish a legal business. As long as petty trade remained illegal
in Khartoum, the problem would continue, she said.
"On an
average day there are about 800 to 1,000 women in prison. Every week,
40 will be released and the police will arrest about 50 more. Sometimes
it is the same women being arrested. It is an ongoing cycle and not a
very productive one," she added. "These women need to be given
opportunities to make money. If there are none, they will continue to
make illegal substances, and the cycle will just continue." |
|
|
|
|
Who's Online |
|
We have 22 guests online |
|
|