KARACHI: The government of Pakistan’s southern Sindh province this week started a drive to vaccinate prisoners aged 50 and above across provincial prisons, aiming to inoculate 1,882 inmates and 641 jail staff during a campaign that rights groups hope other provinces will also roll out.
Jails in Pakistan are massively crowded, with inmates vulnerable not only because they live in high-risk settings in what are often older and poorly ventilated buildings but also because they often have co-morbidities that worsen prognosis should they fall ill, public health experts say.
In Karachi Central Jail where the drive was launched by Inspector General of prisons, Kazi Nazir Ahmed, on Wednesday, almost a quarter of the jail population had tested positive for the coronavirus last June. The jail, with a capacity of 2,400 prisoners, currently houses 5,000 inmates.
Overall, Sindh has an overcrowding ratio of 32.23 percent, with 17,239 inmates lodged in 24 prisons meant for 13,038 inmates, according to figures from jail authorities.
“This COVID-19 is the biggest disaster that man is facing nowadays. We are proud of the government of Sindh which has taken very effective measures and timely measures,” IG prisons Ahmed told Arab News, saying his was the first prison department in the country vaccinating inmates and jail staff.
Sarah Belal, the founder of Justice Project Pakistan, which advocates for prisoners’ rights, wrote on Twitter:
“I cannot be more excited and relieved to hear this. Prisoner and prison officials are one of the most vulnerable and at risk members of our community. I desperately hope that other provinces will follow Sindh’s example.”
I cannot be more excited and relieved to hear this. Prisoner and prison officials are one of the most vulnerable and at risk members of our community. I desperately hope that other provinces will follow Sindh’s example https://t.co/n2F30apnaw
— Sarah Belal (@SarahBelal_) April 6, 2021
In Karachi’s Central Jail, 790 prisoners and members of jail staff will get vaccine jabs, followed by Central Prison Sukkur where 696 people will be inoculated. In Hyderabad Central Prison, 663 people will get shots and in district prison Malir Karachi, 550 will be vaccinated. Of the prisoners getting vaccinated, 920 are under trial inmates, 862 are convicted criminals and 100 are detainees.
“We believe that people in prison have the basic rights enshrined in the constitution of Pakistan and that’s why the government of Sindh has started this initiative of vaccinating the prisoners,” Murtaza Wahab, the spokesperson of the provincial government, told Arab News.
“The government has given this facility to inmates because they cannot go outside; this is very positive step and will save lives of people,” Karachi Central Jail’s superintendent, Muhammad Hassan Sehto, told Arab News. “Vaccination was far from our reach and even the people outside [jail] are deprived of it. We are thankful to the administration for this.”
A prisoner from Niger told Arab News he felt safe after learning about the vaccine drive.
“We had many prisoners who were ill of the coronavirus,” he told Arab News at Karachi Central Jail. “I think we will be safer with the vaccination.”
A Pakistani prisoner added: “I am grateful that all of us in Pakistan will go ahead to get this vaccine and hopefully we will save Pakistan from this menace.”