Colombia’s prison crisis escalating as Ombudsman calls for closures

Colombia’s Ombudsman on Monday called for the closure of some of the nation’s prisons due to extreme overcrowding and a chronic humanitarian crisis that is unfolding, reported El Pais newspaper.

Almost a year after garnering national attention, prison overcrowding throughout Colombia continues to climb, due in major part to a backlogged justice system and wholly inadequate facilities.

Carlos Negret requested that the Constitutional Court close the prisons in Riohacha in the La Guajira province and Bellavista in Antioquia, which suffer overcrowding rates of 452% and 283% respectively, according to El Pais.

 


Colombia failing to reduce desperate overcrowding in prisons


Last May, the country’s Justice Minister declared a state of emergency in the country’s prison system. Facilities across Colombia were overcrowded, understaffed, and underfunded.

To address the most pressing concerns–mainly access to healthcare–the decree granted the National Penitentiary Institute (Inpec) and the Penitentiary Services Unit (Uspec) broad powers to expedite contracts to renovate prisons and increase access to adequate healthcare.

Ten months later, overcrowding has increased so much that the country’s Ombudsman taken drastic action requesting closures.


Colombia tries to prevent mass exodus from overcrowded prisons


According to Inpec, the 316 prisons throughout Colombia are designed to hold about 78,000 prisoners. The current prison population is almost 120,000–an overcrowding rate of 52%.

Health and personal safety remain major concerns within prison populations. Between 2013 and 2015, 1255 inmates died inside Colombian prisons, according to a report by researchers from Colombian NGOs Dejusticia, Colombia Diversa, and Bogota’s Externado University.


South Colombia prison guards protest overcrowding


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