comparemela.com

Latest Breaking News On - Mangaroa prison - Page 1 : comparemela.com

Kelvin Davis says his family was left with nothing

Labour deputy leader Kelvin Davis has launched a stinging attack on Parliament's Opposition parties, saying their privilege had been built on the misery of

Bay-of-islands
New-zealand-general
New-zealand
Kokiri
Mangaroa
Michael-cunningham
Tai-tokerau
Paul-taylor
Kelvin-davis
David-seymour
Tiritio-waitangi
Parliament-opposition

Waikeria protests put a spotlight on prison conditions

Waikeria protests put a spotlight on prison conditions Newsroom 13/01/2021 © Provided by Newsroom While the protests at Waikeria shine a light on prisoner conditions, abuses of power and inhumane treatment in prison are not new and will continue until prisoner numbers significantly reduce, writes Christine McCarthy The recent six-day Waikeria protest highlighted problems at that prison, but it is not unique. The December Ombudsman’s report on Auckland Prison at Paremoremo similarly identified poor cell ventilation, evening meals served as early as 2.30pm and 3.30pm, prisoners locked up in cells 22–23 hours a day, and an average of three minutes a day of rehabilitation for prisoners in Units 12 and 13.

United-kingdom
Christine-mccarthy
David-gauke
Rory-stewart
Supreme-court
December-ombudsman
Auckland-prison
Auckland-south
Mangaroa-prison
Paparua-prison
Emergency-response-unit
Kingdom-prison-minister-rory-stewart

Transforming Waikeria - Hōkai Rangi or Hōkai Nuku?

Sir Kim Workman The Waikeria Prison situation brings back painful memories of my own. Between 1990 and 1993, as operational head of prisons in the then Department of Justice, I attempted to implement a reform strategy known as He Ara Hou (A New Way). (File image). Photo: Unsplash / Matthew Ansley In 2019, the government committed to Hokai Rangi a visionary strategy to transform the prison system. He Ara Hou failed and closed down at the end of 1993 - Hokai Rangi has yet to succeed. There are lessons to be learned. There are striking similarities. Prisons have always been places of extreme violence, and when prisoners are treated in such a way that they return to the community more violent, prisons become a cause of crime. For Māori, prisons have a history which insists on repeating itself.

Hokai-rangi
Geoff-braybrook
Basil-logan
Doug-graham
Tonu-nei
Ministry-of-justice-photo
Department-of-justice
Penal-division
Department-of-corrections
Sir-kim
Waikeria-prison

vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.