House approves $13.6M spent on meals for inmates in Guyana’s prisons – in 2015

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Rioting inmates of the the Camp Street Prison, look out the prison windows in Georgetown, Guyana, Friday, March 4, 2016. The uprising that has entered into its third day has clammed the lives of more than a dozen inmates and injured several police officers. Officials say the deaths occurred after inmates set fires during a riot as guards seized drugs, cell phones and other items. (AP Photo/Bert Wilkinson)

Ramjattan says increase in prison population driving up costs

Guyana’s National Assembly yesterday approved $13.6 million that was spent by the Ministry of Public Security in 2015 to provide meals for inmates in the country’s prisons.

Questioned on the expenditure for dietary supplies, Minister of Public Security Mr Khemraj Ramjattan said there was an increase of around 116 inmates across Guyana.

Guyana's Public Security Minister, Khemraj Ramjattan.
Guyana’s Public Security Minister, Khemraj Ramjattan

The minister also pointed out that there was an increase in the prices for food supplies and the special dietary requirements for inmates with chronic diseases and those who are HIV positive.

Asked about the delay in moving from the use of wood burning stoves in the prisons by opposition Member of Parliament Mr Clement Rohee, Minister Ramjattan indicated that proposals for gas burning stoves are being considered and cited the lack of space for the “running of gas lines” as just one of the challenges that needs to be overcome.

According to the minister, there has also been price increases for diary, vegetable and meat products due to the prolonged dry season.

Opposition PPP Member of Parliament and former Home Affairs Minister, Clement Rohee
Opposition PPP Member of Parliament and former Home Affairs Minister, Clement Rohee

It was revealed to the House that moves are being made to equip and restart prison farms at locations across Guyana but Ramjattan pointed out that the “prison system will never be totally self-sufficient”.

According to a GINA report, the minister also informed the House that the prison population has increased “from 1994 inmates as at January 01, 2015 to 2113 inmates as at December 20, 2015”.

The original amount approved during the passage of the 2015 national budget amounted t0 $90 million dollars.

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