Yahoo – AFP,
Cecil Morella, 22 June 2014
Iwahig (Philippines) (AFP) - One hundred convicts armed with machetes wander through a vast prison without walls in one of the Philippines' most beautiful islands, a unique approach to reforming criminals.
Inmates from the mininum security compound walk unescorted to their place of work at Iwahig prison in Puerto Princesa, Palawan island, June 6, 2014 (AFP Photo/Ted Aljibe) |
Iwahig (Philippines) (AFP) - One hundred convicts armed with machetes wander through a vast prison without walls in one of the Philippines' most beautiful islands, a unique approach to reforming criminals.
Two token
guards with shotguns slung on their shoulders relax in the shade nearby as the
blue-shirted group of inmates chop weeds at a rice paddy at the Iwahig Prison
and Penal Farm on Palawan island.
But Arturo,
who is 21 years into a life sentence for murder, has no plans to escape,
preferring to keep his chances of an eventual commutation or even a pardon.
"I
don't want to live the life of a rat, panicked into bolting into a hole each
time a policeman comes my way," the 51-year-old inmate, whose full name
cannot be used in keeping with prison regulations, told AFP.
Surrounded
by a thick coastal mangrove forest, a mountain range and a highway, the
26,000-hectare (64,000-acre) Iwahig jail is one of the world's largest open
prisons, more than two times the size of Paris.
A single
guard sits at its largely ceremonial main gate, routinely waving visitors
through without inspection.
A shallow
ditch, but no walls, is all that separates the 3,186 prisoners from the outside
world.
A mere 14
kilometres (nine miles) away is Puerto Princesa, a city of 250,000 people and a
top tourist destination as the gateway to an island famed for stunning dive
sites, a giant underground river system and beautiful beaches.
A steady
stream of local and foreign tourists visit Iwahig's quaint, pre-World War II
prison administration buildings and a handicrafts shop, which is manned by
inmates who have made the items on sale.
A few
hundred hectares of the land is devoted to rice paddies, which sit
picturesquely on either side of a fire-tree-lined dirt road. Ducks, goats,
cattle and egrets feed quietly on newly harvested plots.
Fish ponds,
coconut plantations, corn fields and vegetable plots are scattered across the
prison, although the bulk of the land remains covered by forest and mangroves.
Penal
colony's harsh history
US colonial
rulers established Iwahig in 1904 for political prisoners and Manila's worst
inmates, seeking to isolate them in what was then a sparsely inhabited frontier
about 600 kilometres (370) miles from the nation's capital.
Prisoners
were used to clear virgin rainforests for farming, which would in turn
encourage migration from the archipelago's more populous areas.
After the
Philippines won independence post-World War II, those who had served out their
term were also given the option to clear and own up to six hectares of land.
Up until
the 1970s, the prisons had much tougher security than today, with chain gangs
of inmates the norm.
Prison
guards watch as inmates from the
medium security compound work on a rice
field
at Iwahig prison in Puerto Princesa,
Palawan island, June 6, 2014 (AFP
Photo/
Ted Aljibe)
|
A fresh
breath of reform
But at
Iwahig, and four smaller penal farms in other provincial areas, authorities
have sought to take advantage of the open spaces to create conditions that
encourage the rehabilitation of inmates.
"This
(farm work) serves as their preparation for getting back into a free society
once they are released. It helps them adapt back to life as free men,"
said prison superintendent Richard Schwarzkopf.
Iwahig's
inmates mostly come from Manila's main Bilibid prison, a far smaller facility
that holds about 22,000 convicts and which requires periodic prisoner transfers
to ease the over-crowding.
Instead of
the squalid, sardine can-like cells of Bilibid, night quarters for most of
Iwahig's inmates are lightly guarded buildings that are bigger than a
basketball court, surrounded by barbed wire rather than concrete or metal
walls.
About 50
lucky minimum-security inmates live full-time in straw-and-bamboo huts
scattered along the penal farm, assigned to guard the crops, tractors and other
implements.
There are
just 150 maximum-security inmates who must work indoors and remain in a more
tightly secured environment.
However,
murderers and other previous maximum-security prisoners can qualify for the
outdoors if they have served at least half their sentence and have a record of
good behaviour. A life sentence is regarded as a 40-year term.
Schwarzkopf
said the modern approach to penology had been a success. He said less than 10
percent of Iwahig's prisoners became repeat offenders after being released,
lower than the national average.
Inmates
from the medium security compound work on a rice field at Iwahig
prison in
Puerto Princesa, Palawan island, June 6, 2014 (AFP Photo/Ted Aljibe)
|
The jail
has also had no recent history of riots or mass breakouts.
Schwarzkopf
said there had been just one breakout since he took over leadership of the
prison in 2012: involving four inmates serving terms for murder, attempted
murder and car theft.
Three of
them were swiftly captured, according to Schwarzkopf, although he declined to
say which one of the four remained at large.
Prominent
Puerto Princesa lawyer Herminia Caabay said she also regarded Iwahig's
"humane" approach to inmates as a success.
"Riots
are a sign of depression brought about by prison conditions. These usually happen
at places where people are kept behind bars," Caabay said.
Convicted
drug dealer Gamay, 39, said he treasured his time working the land as it helped
him keep his mind off his wife, who had left him for another man.
"It
stops me thinking bad things," said the stocky, tattooed former fish
vendor, who began his 30-year sentence in Manila's Bilibid but was transferred
to Iwahig seven years ago.
Gamay said
living at Iwahig had allowed him to dream and prepare for a successful life
back in society.
"The work
experience helps you learn to stand on your own two feet... I want to go back
to selling fish and save up to build my own house," he said.
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