Wednesday, 5 November 2014
46 Prisons staff killed as Boko Haram frees 2,255 prisoners in five years
The Nigerian Prisons Service (NPS), has disclosed that between July 27, 2009 when Boko Haram terrorists attacked Maiduguri Prisons and freed 482 inmates and October 29, 2014 when another set of 366 inmates were also freed following the overrun of Mubi, in Adamawa State, a total of 2,255 prison inmates have been freed from various prisons across the country in 14 different attacks.
However, 194 of the escapee inmates have so far been rearrested.
Spokesperson for the Service, Mr. Ope Fatinikun gave the figures in Abuja on Wednesday at the Forum of Spokespersons of Security and Response Agencies (FOSSRA)/I-Nigerian Initiative media interaction in Abuja.
He said: “A total of forty six prison officers, comprising forty two serving and four retired personnel have been killed since the inception of the insurgency”.
While lamenting the negative societal attitude to ex-convicts, the NPS image maker explained that there were robust training and productivity opportunities available to prisoners with full fledged industrial and small and medium scale enterprises established in this regard.
Some of them include furniture cottage industry, printing industry, toilet roll industry, soap cottage industry, shoe factory and an industrial complex, aside 47 other agro-allied businesses scattered across the states.
He noted that inmates feeding allowance had been reviewed upwards from the current N200 to N300 and gas N150 daily from January 2015.
Fatinikun further said “National Open University of Nigeria (NOUN) established special study centres in Kirikiri Medium Security Prison, Lagos, Enugu, Kuje, and Port-Harcourt with some inmates in Lagos bagging a university degree and post graduate diploma from NOUN.
“Sixty nine inmates of Borstal Institution (young people’s prison), Kaduna sat for the UTME, while another 55 inmates enrolled for the November/December NECO/WAEC examinations.”
The spokesman who identified inadequate budgetary allocation, prison congestion, inadequate staffing, insurgency and terrorism as some of the challenges facing the Service said as at June this year, 56,785 inmates made up of 18,042 convicted and 38,743 awaiting trial persons were dwelling inside the 239 prisons located in different parts of the country.
Again, 947 of these were young male offenders, 151 foreigners, 10 babies and 1,439 have been sentenced to die
Fatinikun observed that congestion of prisons was caused by a number of factors, including inadequate operational vehicles like the case in Lagos and Kaduna with over 200 and 100 courts respectively and the NPS has only 20 and 10 vehicles, respectively to convey inmates to courts for trials.
He also canvassed for the provision of heavy arms and ammunition for the service, including helicopters and armoured personnel carriers for it to be able to respond to incessant attacks on prison formations and personnel.
Earlier in her welcome address, National Coordinator of I-Nigerian Initiate, Ada Stella Apiafi appealed to Nigerians to change their negative attitude towards prisoners, ex-convicts and prison officials, saying “these people should be shown love and accommodation in the society so that they will be properly re-integrated”.
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