Maximum limits of punishment are often crossed, with many inmates suffering in the form of psychological disorders, disease and a lost sense of self-respect. Overcrowded jails, lack of sanitation facilities, long hours of loneliness in poorly ventilated cells and poor treatment are enough to drive a grown man to madness, let alone a teenager. Add to this, a justice machinery that is creaking under the weight of unattended case files. With a legal system ridden by delays and corruption, it often takes many years for punishments to be decided. Even under-trial prisoners end up spending long periods just waiting for their trials to complete and in some cases have spent more time in jail then their maximum prison sentence if they had been convicted. The easiest solution to these miseries is but one: the law ministry, in collaboration with some departments of the interior ministry, should assign some staff for regular scrutiny of jails, which holds station and jail personnel responsible for any human rights abuses that take place.
Published in The Express Tribune, October 10th, 2014.
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