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New cluster of prisons opens. IMH no more space?

F

Fu Xi

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Singapore
Home > Breaking News > Singapore > Story
Jan 20, 2010

New cluster of prisons opens

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A second cluster of prisons officially opened at Changi Prison Complex, marking a decade of development that has centralised nearly all of Singapore's prisons within a single area. -- ST PHOTOS: KELVIN LIM

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The Housing Unit 2 in accommodation block B4, at the new cluster of prison blocks. The cells are behind blue doors and no photography is allowed inside.

A SECOND cluster of prisons officially opened at Changi Prison Complex on Wednesday, marking a decade of development that has centralised nearly all of Singapore's prisons within a single area. Officiating at the launch of the five prisons that make up this new cluster, which can house 5,600 inmates, Deputy Prime Minister Wong Kan Seng said the move helps cut costs through economies of scale and efficient use of common services. The first cluster of five prisons opened at the complex in 2004, which together with the new cluster, can house some 11,000 inmates. DPM Wong, who is also the Home Affairs Minister, made clear that as prisons modernised with high-tech systems to deter and secure, basic objectives in helping inmates reform must remain unchanged.

He assured that the prisons will continue to provide rehabilitation opportunities for offenders within the context of a spartan, disciplined and deterrent regime.
But Mr Wong added that prisons are not always the most appropriate solution for all offenders. More will be done to allow first offenders convicted of non-serious crimes to serve community-based sanctions instead of going to jail. 'We recognise that even as imprisonment punishes the offender who has committed the crime, it often also brings about hardship to the families of the offenders, especially their children,' he said, pointing out that a slew of community-based treatment orders will come on-stream this year after changes to the Criminal Procedure Code are legislated.


 

VIBGYOR

Alfrescian
Loyal
Beri Spacious, feels like living in Australia or Canada or America!

Without the inmates of course...:biggrin:

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F

Fu Xi

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Home Affairs Ministry to implement new sentencing options

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SINGAPORE: The Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) wants to introduce new sentencing options this year by amending the Criminal Procedure Code. These include short detention stints lasting two weeks.

Home Affairs Minister Wong Kan Seng announced this at the official opening of a new cluster of facilities at the Changi Prison Complex.

New facilities, such as a computer lab at the Changi Prison Service's Pre-Release Centre, will help offenders get back on their feet.

Soh Wai Wah, director of Prisons, said: "The centre aims to adequately prepare all inmates for their return to the community, by equipping them with the relevant knowledge and skills."

At the Changi Prison Complex, inmates who are about to complete their sentence go through a basic computer course to enhance their employability before they are released back into society.

Besides such programmes, the ministry is working with various agencies to implement new sentencing options.

These include mandatory treatment orders that require offenders to undergo psychiatric treatment of up to two years, which the Health Ministry and Institute of Mental Health will take care of, in lieu of imprisonment.

Prisons will implement short detention orders which will give first time low-risk offenders a short experience of the rigors of detention for up to 14 days.

Mr Wong said: "The Day Reporting Order will require the offender to report regularly to a Reporting Centre managed by Prisons, undergo programmes and be electronically tagged, where necessary, for up to 12 months."

Also, the Community Service Order as a standalone sentencing option will be expanded to include adults. MHA said this will allow a wider range of options to be available so as to match the punishment to the crime.

- CNA/sc


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Watchman

Alfrescian
Loyal
Re: Home Affairs Ministry to implement new sentencing options

To accomodate the increasing crime wave to hit Singapore soon .
 

halsey02

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Re: Home Affairs Ministry to implement new sentencing options

WKS should stay for two weeks........ha ha ha ha...
 

High Command

Alfrescian
Loyal
Thsk it's not always about locking up people. The whole IMH idea is to give the rich elite a way to avoid going to jail and at the same time maintain the impression of rule of law.
 

johnny333

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Go to prison can become even cheaper prison labour for government. Inside they can wash bedsheet for the new IR hotel for $1 a day.

If they imprison people they'll have to provide FREE room, bed, electricity, food,.... AND the PAP supporters will loose business in providing room, bed, electricity, food, ... and of course GST.

Many of the foreigner are already being paid real peanuts. Living in these new prison would be a luxury :smile:

Not forgetting there are more foreigners than there is room in Changi prison
 

VIBGYOR

Alfrescian
Loyal
Now we know the Quota for prisons inmates!

If you can find 20k protestors most of them will go free! :biggrin:

someone should go in a recce and take some pictures of the cell!

There could be human rights violations papa doggies want to hide!
 
O

Orochi

Guest
Treatment in lieu of jail

Singapore
Home > Breaking News > Singapore > Story
Jan 21, 2010

Treatment in lieu of jail

Option among slew of community-based sanctions planned


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Dayroom 1 of Housing Unit 2 in accommodation block B4 in Cluster B, Changi Prison Complex. Each accommodation area, known as a housing unit, comprises 10 cells on two floors and opens to a common dayroom area. -- ST PHOTOS: KEVIN LIM

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OFFENDERS with psychiatric problems can be sent for medical treatment for up to two years in lieu of jail terms, after changes to the Criminal Procedure Code are made in Parliament later this year. The Institute of Mental Health and the Health Ministry have been identified to implement the Mandatory Treatment Order. Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Home Affairs Wong Kan Seng said on Wednesday that the move is among a slew of community-based sanctions aimed at first-time offenders convicted of non-serious crimes which would have otherwise landed them in jail. Mr Wong was speaking at the official launch of a second cluster of prisons at the Changi Prison Complex (CPC), a move which capped a decade of efforts to centralise all of Singapore's prisons in one area. Only Kaki Bukit Centre, Admiralty West Prison and Selarang Park Centre remain outside Changi. Changi Women's Prison is a standalone unit. More than 200 guests, including Law and Second Home Affairs Minister K. Shanmugam, Senior Minister of State Ho Peng Kee, Senior District Judge Tan Siong Thye and other senior officials, were present.

Read the full story in Thursday's edition of The Straits Times.
[email protected]


 

halsey02

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Go to prison can become even cheaper prison labour for government. Inside they can wash bedsheet for the new IR hotel for $1 a day.

In the name of rehabilation with a lovely sounding YELLOW RIBBON, of course this is good, isn't?

Cheap catering & laundry service for the IR's & hotels....in my time of 'servitude' ( National Service), I have sampled bread baked by rehabilated people..."they are so good, that they can bounce on theri own"..:biggrin:
 

VIBGYOR

Alfrescian
Loyal
Re: Treatment in lieu of jail

Yeah right everbody else has mental problems other than these group of 200 people visiting the prisons!

Are they saying that if you don't serve our Hakka lee regime you could end up here!
 

postnew

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
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The new prison wing, Cluster B, was offocially opened, 5,000 inmates from five prisons were moved to their new accommodation.

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Cluster B went fully operational on August 24, 2009. It has 1,800 cells.
 
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