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Billy Burnett Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Nov-05-10 08:51 AM
Original message
On the Cuban prison state
Edited on Fri Nov-05-10 08:55 AM by Billy Burnett



LESSONS FROM OUR NEIGHBORS TO THE SOUTH:
THE CUBAN PRISON SYSTEM - REFLECTIVE OBSERVATIONS

http://afrocubaweb.com/elijah.htm

by Prof. Soffiyah Elijah
Clinical Instructor
Criminal Justice Institute
Harvard Law School


Since the island nation of Cuba experienced its successful revolution in 1959 its prison system has been evolving. Despite accusations of harsh human rights abuses from its neighbors to the North, Cuba today maintains a prison system that is in many respects far more humane than Western propaganda would have the uninformed public believe.

My study of the Cuban prison system began in 1987 when I first visited the country to attend a conference co-sponsored by the American Association of Jurists and the Cuban Association of Jurists. I was pleasantly surprised during the trip when the opportunity arose to visit a men's prison. A group of conference attendees traveled by bus to the prison and when we arrived we were not searched and our belongings were not checked. We did not sign in or out. Nobody asked to check our identification. Having visited numerous prisons in the U.S. I have never entered any of them without a thorough search of my person and my belongings. Government issued photo identification is always required.

Although we were given a tour of the prison we were free to wander off and talk with the prisoners unmonitored. We walked all around the facility and were allowed to go into cells, work areas, the cafeteria, hospital, classrooms, recreation area and any other space we chose. This we were allowed to do unaccompanied. The prisoners wore street clothing.

Although one might think that this must have been a minimum or medium security prison, there are no such institutional classifications. Prison institutions are not characterized by security level. Rather prisoners of varying security levels are all housed in the same facility. The four levels of security classification for prisoners are maximum, high, moderate and minimum. The distinction in their security classification is borne out in the frequency with which they are allowed family and conjugal visits, mail, phone privileges and furlough availability. All prisoners, regardless of security level, are afforded at least four family and conjugal visits a year. Prisoners with the lowest security classifications are afforded more frequent family and conjugal visits than higher security classified prisoners.

Needless to say I was a bit taken aback at this very different approach. For the next thirteen years I built on this experience and conducted further research on the Cuban prison system.

In 1988 I returned to Cuba to attend the International Women¹s Conference hosted by the Federation of Cuban Women (FMC). Another opportunity arose to visit a prison, this time it was a women’s facility. My impressions were very similar to those I had when I visited the men’s facility. In a nutshell, the Cuban system still impressed me as being more humane than what I had observed in the United States.

Prisoners in Cuba are incarcerated in the province in which they live. A province is the geographic equivalent to a county as we know it in the United States. This is done to facilitate regular contact between prisoners and their families. This contact is seen as an integral part of the prisoner¹s rehabilitation. Families are incorporated through joint counseling into the rehabilitation process. Each prison is staffed with professionals who are trained to assist the family and the prisoner plan for his or her re-entry into the community. The focus is on rehabilitation as opposed to retribution and punishment.

Prisoners or their families may request conditional liberty passes. These are similar to furloughs and are granted to allow the prisoner to tend to his or a family member’s health. The furlough time is counted as part of the sentence.

Prisoners are not obligated to work. Work is considered a right of the prisoner so that he can earn an income. Prisoners are allowed to work in the same sort of employment as they held prior to their incarceration if it is available at the facility where they are being held. They are compensated for their labor at the same wage that free workers are compensated. They are not charged room and board no matter how much they earn. Similarly, they do not have to pay for their education, medical, dental or hospital care or any other activities they experience. Social security benefits and pensions are available to all prison laborers. In the event of a prisoner’s death, his family will receive his pension. A portion of the prisoner’s earnings is sent to his family. Even if a prisoner does not work, his family will be cared for by the State.

Once a prisoner has served at least half of his sentence he can request a conditional release if he is a first offender. A positive conduct record is the primary factor considered in granting the request for relief. The request for conditional release is made to the sentencing tribunal. The district attorney is given an opportunity to be heard with respect to the request. All prisoners are released after serving two thirds of their sentences.

In 1997 the availability of alternatives to incarceration was expanded to cover all defendants sentenced to up to five years incarceration. Previously these alternatives were only available to defendants sentenced to up to three years. The expansion of the availability of alternatives to incarceration to all defendants facing up to five years’ incarceration covered almost 95% of Cuba¹s prisoners. The recidivism rate for those prisoners released pursuant to the use of alternatives to incarceration is less than 15%. These alternatives include a form of probation, conditional release (similar to parole) and suspended sentences.

The conditional release program is very interesting. The defendant lives for twelve days in a residence located near a farm or industrial center. He works at the farm or industrial center during these twelve days. Then he has three days off where he can leave the residence and go home to his family. On the fourth day, the defendant returns to the work site and the residence. The defendant works side by side with non-incarcerated workers who are not informed of his status. He is paid the same wage as his co-workers and is afforded the same benefits and privileges. He works the same shifts and wears civilian clothing. Work alternatives can be revoked if the defendant fails to adhere to the rules and conditions of the program. The sentencing tribunal is informed if the defendant fails to meet the conditions and it can decide to return the defendant to prison.

The goal of the Cuban prison system is to return people to the community as productive contributors as soon as possible. Therefore the focus is not on punishment, but rather on rehabilitation and re-education. Perhaps this goal would be a useful addition to the prison system that has evolved in the United States.

(c) 2000 by Soffiyah Elijah.



permission granted by author to post in entirety


Thanks to Mika for above info. :hi:

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social_critic Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Nov-05-10 09:53 AM
Response to Original message
1. Nice to see they improved it
Jailers beat my second cousin to death in one of Castro's jails. His crime? He was carrying US dollars in his pocket, was planning to escape the island.
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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Nov-05-10 10:02 AM
Response to Reply #1
2. There are so many windy people in Florida. I'm sure they are starting to get on each others' nerves.
I've heard some real whoppers over the years coming from that place. They get wilder, and crazier with the retelling. You'd think people would be embarrassed to subject others to it.

I recall hearing of a man who planted bombs in Cuba who told people back in the states he was arrested for grafitti or some such crappola. In prison, he claimed in letters to his friends and loved ones he had been beaten within an inch of his life by the guards, that the guards came into his cell and urinated on him, and that he was almost completely paralyzed.

The Cuban government released him when his sentenced was completed, and his relatives went to the airport to get him, expecting someone would roll him out in a wheelchair, and were surprised to see him bounding across the tarmac to greet them on very firm legs.

Just so pathetic. They need so much to get a life. They don't realize that whereas they can b.s. each other until they faint, when they try that crap on others, people see right through it.
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Billy Burnett Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Nov-05-10 12:22 PM
Response to Reply #1
4. Do you refer to prisons in the USA "Obama's jails".
If they are "Obama's jails", then Obama has a LOT of explaining to do ...

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&source=hp&q=US+prison+abuse&btnG=Google+Search&aq=f&aqi=&aql=&oq=&gs_rfai=

--

It is interesting that you and your ilk constantly obsess over Castro as if he is/was a superhuman entity, able to run, manage, and control each and every nuance of Cuba - and with extreme prejudice too. Castro vigorously does this and Castro vigorously did that. Able to leap tall buildings ...

:crazy:




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dipsydoodle Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Nov-05-10 01:03 PM
Response to Reply #1
5. Presumably
that was after the US accused Cuba of money laundering at which point it became an offence , quite understandably , for Cubans to be found in possession of even one single US$ - still is.

You take your chances : you pay the price. I'm sure there was more to it than you expressed.

I understand killing a cow has quite a stiff penalty too but the law against it sure put a stop to cattle rustling.
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Billy Burnett Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Nov-05-10 02:04 PM
Response to Reply #5
6. In the not so recent past in parts of the US, cattle rustling got the death penalty, by hanging.
Even for 1 head of cattle.

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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Nov-05-10 10:04 AM
Response to Original message
3. Very interesting statement from the Harvard Law professor. Thanks. n/t
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