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N’ Assembly kicks against preferential treatment for dogs at correctional centres

By Nathaniel Zacchaeus, Abuja

Members of the National Assembly Joint Committee on the Interior expressed anger yesterday when authorities of the Nigerian Correctional Service (NCS) claimed that it spends more money to feed dogs than the inmates.

The Controller-General of the NCS, Haliru Nababa, appeared before a joint National Assembly Committee on Interior to defend his 2024 budget.

Nababa told the lawmakers, “The Nigeria Correctional Service has written the Minister of Interior requesting for the review of the amount we are using to feed the inmates from N750 per day to N3,000 per day, we are still waiting for the approval.

“We are therefore seeking the assistance of the National Assembly to approve the increment. We have made provision for the feeding of inmates, dogs, and staff on training in six training institutions across the country. The money is grossly inadequate.

“The total number of inmates in 2023 is 81, 354 nationwide while 53, 352 are awaiting trial. The budget for feeding each of them per day is N750 at N250 per meal, per inmate. We also have about 100 dogs that we feed with N800 per day.”

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The CG explained that the feeding allowance per day would be reduced to N720 after the reduction of VAT and tax.

When the joint panel demanded the breakdown of the menu being served to the prisoners as breakfast, lunch, and dinner, the CG and his team said they had the menu of what the prisoners should eat as breakfast, lunch, and dinner based on the locality they are being remanded. The CG however said they were not with the menu chart.

The CG said the quantity of the food and the ingredients needed to prepare it are contained in the chart.

Oshiomhole who is the Chairman of the joint committee wondered how the authorities of the NCS manage to feed the inmates with such a paltry sum going by the market price.

He said, “53, 352 or more are not convicted yet, they are awaiting trial. They are not guilty of any offence known to law.

“They are innocent under our laws. For an innocent Nigerian who is being held in a correctional home N250 per meal is grossly inadequate. I wonder what you are feeding them with. They are underfed.

“The Minister of Interior said yesterday that the NCS rather than being correctional is dehumanising.

“I am surprised that the 2024 budget is still based on old figures. I am surprised the CG cannot, based on the market forces cannot present before us, the realistic amount that could feed an innocent Nigerian who has not been pronounced guilty by any court of

“You mean the chart is so complicated that you will need to read a book to tell us?”

*’You can’t feed innocent, convicted Nigerians in your custody with this paltry sum’ 

Oshiomhole further caused a stir when he asked the NCS team how much it costs them to buy the quantity of the foodstuff and ingredients needed to prepare the meal of a prisoner.

He said, “This is a very important assignment. A lot of Nigerians under your care are innocent. They are in prisons, courtesy of big men and women who want to ‘teach them a lesson’.

“Many of them are there on an offence they knew nothing about. However, the system has put them under your care.

“Somebody said if Mandela was in a Nigerian prison for 27 years, he would have lost his sanity by the time he was released to govern South Africa.

“Our prisons are meant to correct the behaviours of the people. They are not condemnation centres. They are not to be dehumanised.

“How can you look us eye to eye and tell us that you feed a grown-up man in Nigeria with N750 a day? One thing that has come out is that an un-convicted Nigerian is being fed with N750 and you feed each of the dogs under your care with N800 per day.

“So, a dog is better fed in the Nigerian prison than an innocent Nigerian in your custody. It is a policy issue. We don’t know the intention of the government to allocate more money to feed animals than to feed human beings. It is a major policy issue for us.”

 

 

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