THE SEMI-DETONATED GRENADE OF PHONES IN OUR JAILS

THE SEMI-DETONATED GRENADE OF PHONES IN OUR JAILS

Mobile phones have for at least, the past two decades, become indispensable companions in our daily lives. They come in handy in diverse circumstances and have undoubtedly become tools for social cohesion today. 

Communications in all forms are facilitated by mobile phones; voice and video calls, text messages and various multimedia messages are transmitted through this medium. Businesses, families and acquaintances are sustained through the constant use of mobile phones.

With the increasing need to use mobile phones in our daily lives comes a major security challenge: mobile phones in jails. Prisons are a reflection of society and so incarcerated persons are expected to have use for mobile phones. Most prisons in Ghana operate communication centres where inmates are allowed limited call times with family and friends, though to the hearing and understanding of a supervising officer.

The issue under the circumstance is, most inmates want to own and freely operate mobile phones behind bars, a prohibited act in our prisons. 

How do phones get into prisons?

It is an undeniable fact that no security system is foolproof, a reason for which some prohibited articles find their way into prisons. With the apparent demand of mobile phones in prison comes a willing number of persons risking its smuggling for monetary gains.

A number of phones which make their way into our facilities are smuggled in by visitors who come to visit incarcerated persons, mostly concealed in food items they bring to inmates. They are concealed in very obscure areas making it difficult for gate security officers without the required gadgets like scanners and metal detectors to detect. Others conceal them in their hair, footwear, underwear and other parts of their bodies.

In other circumstances, inmates who are sent out for outdoor labour, medical care and courts have the tendency of smuggling prohibited items into facilities if escorting officers lose supervision the slightest bit. There are disgusting cases where inmates insert portable phones and accessories into their anus to outwit security at the gate of our facilities.    

There are circumstances also where unscrupulous prison staff engage in mobile phone smuggling and trade with inmates. These individuals conceal phones and accessories in accoutrements notably, boots, caps and under their belts as they attempt to outwit security at the gate. Gate security officers at the Ankaful Maximum Security Prison in the past two years have apprehended five prison staff who attempted to smuggle prohibited items including mobile phones into the facility. 

All persons found culpable of smuggling prohibited articles into prisons are handed over to the police for prosecution. Prison staff involved in this act apart from criminal prosecution, undergo service disciplinary procedures and suffer appropriate sanctions when found guilty. The trial and imprisonment of a prison officer to a thirteen year jail term for trafficking in April this year testifies that, no prison staff engaged in activities which expose the security of our prisons and or brings the name of the service into disrepute is shielded.  

The danger

Prisons are total institutions as all aspects of the prisoner’s life are regulated. Certain rights of individuals end at the prison gate as the prison system attempts to correct their offending behaviours. The prohibition of mobile phone usage is to prevent unrestricted prisoner communication with the outside world.

Though few inmates use these phones to communicate with acquaintances, most use them to perpetuate crimes from within the walls of our prisons. 

There are reported cases where inmates with the help of phones establish amorous relationships with women outside our walls, pretending to be Ghanaian businessmen living abroad. These relationships grow to an extent where they exchange nude images and videos with the unsuspecting women. They mostly end up duping the women of huge sums of monies or blackmailing them with the threat of leaking their nudes on social media. 

Prisoners with mobile phones have the tendency of directing crimes from within prisons as they are in constant touch with gangs outside. Phones can also be used to plan escapes as incarcerated persons could easily feed gangs outside with security situations of prisons where they serve. Inmates with phones are also able to facilitate smuggle of drugs and other prohibited articles into our prisons. 

It is interesting to note that some inmates, especially, those on remand, through the use of phones threaten lawyers and witnesses and attempt to interfere with police investigations. This has the tendency of undermining the work of police investigators and the outcome of cases in the long run.

Keeping society safe

The era where drugs and cigarettes were the contraband of choice for both prisoners and smugglers is fast fading as mobile phones have emerged as the new trend. The attendant problems its use comes with should be of concern not only to prison administrators but to the general public.

Periodic arrests, prosecution and jailing of smugglers as well as searches to rid inmate cells of prohibited articles suggests that the Ghana Prisons Service is bent on making our facilities contraband-free. The rest is for government to provide necessary security gadgets to aid in detecting contrabands at the prison gate and in the case of phones, if possible, network jammers to interfere with communications on smuggled phones. 

It should be noted that, mobile phones in prisons could be as destructive as guns as they are used by prisoners to continue criminal activities from where they left off.

DSP. DANIEL MACHATOR

CENTRAL REGIONAL PRO

GHANA PRISONS SERVICE

machator@hotmail.com

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