Prisoner Justice Day at Sudbury jail to honour suicide, homicide victims behind bars - Action News
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Sudbury

Prisoner Justice Day at Sudbury jail to honour suicide, homicide victims behind bars

The Sudbury jail will host an advocacy event later this week for prisoners who die of unnatural deaths such as homicide or suicide while incarcerated.

'We become nothing more than a vindictive society,' if community ignores prisoners' rights, says organizer

The Sudbury jail will host a Prisoner Justice Day later this week, to honour those who've died by suicide, homicide behind bars. (Jenifer Norwell/CBC)

The Sudbury jail will host an advocacy event later this week for prisoners who die of unnatural deaths such as homicide or suicide while incarcerated.

The John Howard Society is organizingthe commemoration on Thursday, which is meantto honour prisoners and raise awareness of their rights.

"Even though they may have committed horrendous crimes, it is not right to at least treat them as if they have no meaning in life," says John Rimore, the executive director of the local John Howard Society chapter.

Cramped conditions breed anger, violence

Rimore says conditions at the Sudbury jail have improved when it comes to cleanliness, air ventilation and shower quality. There's still violence behind bars, however, especially when two to three inmates are sharing close quarters.

"You have people in the size of a large bathroom with a toilet in the room. It's veryhard for people to not just have a sense of privacy, but a sense that they have some space," says Rimore.

"When peopleare cramped together in a room, it breeds violence andanger. The smallest of events can cause someone to get upset."

Lack of supports for recently-released

The other part of the problem is rehabilitation. Rimore says there's a serious lack of transitional houses in Sudbury, and many social assistance programs are over-run or difficult to reach.

"Many of these folks return to their old friends, their oldstompinggrounds, which in many cases were the very reasons why they were incarcerated in the first place," he says.

"It's a breeding ground for a higher risk for many of the men and women to just getback to their old ways."

Ignoring prisoner rights 'hurts all of us'

The idea of fighting for prisoners' rights might not be everyone's priority, but Rimore says it's a moral choice.

"If we treat them like they have treated the people that they've hurt, then there will never be any change in our communities and we become nothing more than a vindictive and vendetta-based society," he says.

"That hurts all of us."

The spiritual commemoration will be led bythe jail's chaplain. Women from theN'SwakamokNative Friendship Center are also expected to be there to leaddrumming songs.

Listen to the interview here.

with files from Olivia Stefanovich