Zimbabwe News

Prisoners appeal for community acceptance

Inmates at Josiah Tungamirai Airbase in Gweru last Friday appealed to the community to accept them once they are released from prison, saying rejection was largely the push factor in former prisoners opting to return back to prison.

The inmates, who spoke on the sidelines of the Zimbabwe Prisons and Correctional Services (ZPCS) family week, said they had reformed, especially from rehabilitation life skills they were offered in jail.

A prisoner, Calvin Tshuma, who is left with 16 months on his sentence for assault, said he had learnt self-help projects and was ready to be reintegrated back into society.

“My biggest appeal to the community is not to be seen as animals once we are released from prison,” Tshuma said.

“The biggest threat to the acceptance of a prisoner back into society is rejection. Yes, we might have committed crimes, but we are saying in life there is always room for reforming. So please accept us back.”

While in prison, Tshuma said he had learnt horticulture, carpentry and painting skills which would help him start a new life outside jail.

Another prisoner, Lovemore Mapfumo, who is left with 105 days after serving more than three years for theft, said: “I always ask myself if society and, in particular my family, would accept me back once I am out of incarceration.

“Such fear affects our reintegration into society and we appeal for acceptance. I have learnt skills in incubating chicken eggs and I would be useful not only to my community, but the country as a whole once I am released.”

Stewart Moyo, who is serving four years for robbery, said he had learnt to be careful in the way he behaves, saying recklessness landed him in prison.

Moyo said he had now acquired skills in plumbing and building, and had become be a reformed person in life.

The prisoners are transferred from WhaWha Prison to the airbase when they are about to complete their jail terms.

Josiah Tungamirai Airforce Base commander Air Commodore Marcelino Jakuvos Jaya said they were helping inmates with life skills to remove the perception that they were being punished. Saying the reorientation of prisoners was important to facilitate their reintegration to society, he said: “Reintegration into
society should not be hard for inmates and that is why we work with government through the ZPCS to equip prisoners with life skills.”

In other news…Gukurahundi documentalist Silonda dies

Former director of the Catholic Commission for Justice and Peace (CCJP), Matabeleland chapter who played a pivotal role in the documentation of the Gukurahundi massacres by CCJP in the 1980s, Joel Buhlalo Silonda has died.

Gukurahundi

He was 95. The veteran human rights activist and educationist died on Saturday at his home after battling with prostate cancer for a long time. continue reading…

Source: newsday

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