AS Oscar Pistorius spends his second
night behind bars and undergoes prison induction programs the reality
for other disabled prisoners in South Africa is not the same.
The Blade Runner was assessed and immediately placed in a single cell in the hospital wing of Kgosi Mampuru II prison.
But
other disabled prisoners at the same jail, formerly known as Pretoria
Central prison, can only dream about such special treatment.
Like Eric Viljoen, a single amputee with a prosthetic leg. A
convicted rapist, he was in Kgosi Mampuru II since January this year and
moved on Monday, the day before Pistorius got there.
He told the
Wits Justice Program that he was never offered the chance of a single
cell in the hospital wing like Pistorius has. Instead he was in an
overcrowded cell with 37 other prisoners.
The Wits Justice
Program, run out of the Witwatersrand University journalism program,
investigates the plight of prisoners in South African jails.
Robyn Leslie is a researcher with the program and says the experience
of disabled prisoners with whom the program has dealt is not that of
Pistorius.
“They were not given the option of a single cell as
Oscar was. They were not given the option to stay in the hospital wing,”
Ms Leslie said yesterday.
“Anecdotally it has been our experience
there is not such a routine care taken in terms of people who have
disabilities,” she said.
Ms Leslie said the portrait painted in Pistorius’ sentence hearing by
the acting head of Correctional Services, of disabled prisoners well
treated and a prison system on par with the UK and the US, was not the
research program’s experience.
“We are concerned about the
representation that was provided of the prison system on the whole
because by and large that is not our experience.”
Pistorius’ case
was exceptional — from the time of the offence to the trial was only a
year and the verdict was 20 months. Prisoners, with no money or means
and relying on legal aid lawyers can wait years to get to court.
Pistorius is undergoing an induction program to assess which of the jail’s programs and activities he will participate in.
He won’t get his first visitors until the weekend because visiting hours are only on weekends and public holidays.
Convicted
of the culpable homicide of his girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp, Pistorius
was this week sentenced to five years jail. But the law under which he
was sentenced stipulates that after serving one-sixth of the sentence he
could be eligible for release to house arrest. That would be in 10
months time.
-CULLED from News Limited
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