DRC: Jailed activists branded 'terrorists' by regime are bringing humanity back to Congo's prisons
05/06/2016
A prisoner stands in an alley of the Bunia Prison in Bunia,
in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC)
"Doctor Melka" walks around the central prison of
Goma, in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), listening to sick inmates,
taking notes and scribbling prescriptions. Under his white coat is his prison
uniform.
Branded
"terrorists" and "thugs", dozens pro-democracy activists
from the Lutte pour le Changement (The
Struggle for Change, LUCHA) movement are arrested, trialled and sentenced
to long prison sentences in a politically-motivated campaign to silence dissents in the
resource-rich nation.
One of the six activists who were later sentenced to six months in
prison, looks out of a window at the Goma Court of Appeal
on 4 March 2016 minutes before the hearing started.
Jailed doctors 'carry out something resembling surgery'
The group - John Anipenda,
Serge Sivya, Melka Kamundu, Justin Kambale Mutshunga nicknamed
"Croco", Rebecca Kabugho and Ghislain Muhirwa –
immediately looked for a way to encourage each other and fellow inmates.
"We felt we
could change prison life", Kombi told IBTimes UK from
Goma.
On arrival, Doctors
Sivya and Melka, automatically started treating detainees. While there are
three external doctors and two external nurses treating inmates, the young
activist claims it is different when care is regularly provided by a fellow
detainee, especially given the lack of personnel within Congo's
prisons. "There's much more friendliness. The external doctors don't
come regularly, and they dehumanize the detainees, treat us as if we were
animals," Kombi said.
Doctor Sivya
quickly integrated the jail's dispensary department, on a voluntary basis,
while Melka, is also very active within the prison, treating all sorts of
ailments. Like most detainees, Kombi suffered from a bout of typhoid fever
before he was released.
Other recurrent
illnesses treated include chronic cough, malaria, tuberculosis, and serious
injuries following fights. For the latter, the doctors, aided by the pair, have
to "try and carry out something resembling surgery". "They try
their best," Kombi acknowledged.
Croco, an
electro-mechanical engineer, also offers his skills and expertise. When he
arrived in prison, the young activist met a detainee with whom he has since
tried to ensure the vicinity has enough electricity. "They managed to
create a system of installations. Compared to when we were incarcerated, the
prison is now lit at night," Kombi said.
While Muhirwa, an
economist by trade, has been teaching English since arriving in his cell,
dispensing lessons is not easy. "It is difficult without adequate
material, but if the prison administration co-operates it can allow for
textbooks to enter the prison to facilitate the lessons," Fred
Bauma, Congo's most
prominent activist who has been incarcerated in Kinshasa
since February 2015, told IBTimes UK.
Litter strewn in the yard of Muzenze prison in Goma, in the
Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC)
Need for prison administration support
Bauma
was transferred to Makala Prison after he was charged with belonging to an
association formed for the purpose of attacking people and property, forming a
conspiracy against the head of state and attempting to either destroy or change
the "constitutional regime" or incite people to take up arms against
state authority.
Having
witnesses the success of his colleagues in Goma, he says he is also desperate
to put initiatives in place to help the administration and detainees teach a
number of skills in basic IT, management and English to fellow inmates.
"We
would like to have a weekly programme running two or three days, for two
classes of IT. It'll be a first – if the administration accepts. Then we'll
know whether we can continue with that schedule or whether we need to
re-organise it," Bauma said.
Prominent activist Fred Baumahas been "illegally"
detained for more than a year.
Along
with three other LUCHA activists - Yves Makwambala, Bienvenu Matumo and Heritier Kapitene - in
his pavilion, Bauma is awaiting the arrival of IT equipment, due after 9 June.
"It's
a way to stay useful within our community, even though we are in jail. We were
branded by the government, accused of being "terrorists" and
"thugs" which is ridiculous. The best way for us to answer those
accusations is to serve, to give back our love for our country", Bauma
said.
What
does the prison administration think of this new breed of inmates? There are
two management in Goma – the prison director resides outside while the
administration of prison inmates lives among the detainees. The latter, Kombi
says, are "grateful" for the services supplied. "Even the prison
director told us he was impressed."
In
Kinshasa, Bauma said, the prisons face a serious lack of personnel. "So to
have these professionals, who can deliver quality services, is a windfall for
the prison administration".
However,
he said, when they learn those delivering these services are members of the
LUCHA or other citizen movements, they are "somewhat scared of how their
superiors will interpret that. Up until now, when it comes to delivering
medical aid, it's been accepted. If it were for other lessons or exchanges,
they clearly ask you not to speak about politics, and stay within the field of
the lesson. There's always this sort of paranoia around the activists, but I
don't see why we would wait to go to prison to lead a certain type of
activity," Bauma added.
"People
just want to serve their community wherever they are, especially because there
is no form of re-education or re-integration offered to detainees in our
prisons. It's all part of our fight."
By Elsa
Buchanan
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