By Billy Mijungu
The discourse on criminal justice often centers on punishment while overlooking the conditions under which people are detained. Beyond the routine jailing of petty offenders whose lives are frequently reduced to rubble there exists a neglected human rights concern within cells and jails.
The constitutional principle of innocent until proven guilty must extend beyond the courtroom and into places of detention. Once a person is arrested the State assumes full control over their life dignity and safety and must therefore act as a responsible custodian rather than a silent violator.
Detention should never expose suspects to harm neglect or degrading treatment. At the point of arrest the State has a duty to protect individuals from unsafe conditions disease violence and moral decay.
Access to clean water adequate food proper sleeping areas sufficient lighting and sanitary facilities is not a privilege but a basic requirement of human dignity.
These standards are recognized in modern correctional systems and international human rights instruments and should guide the management of all detention facilities.
Even those serving long prison sentences retain their humanity and deserve humane treatment. Lawful restrictions do not justify cruelty neglect or exposure to inhuman living conditions.
A properly organized prison should provide order cleanliness personal hygiene and mental stability. Correctional facilities are meant to rehabilitate and reintegrate not to destroy the human spirit or worsen social harm.
When prisons become places of suffering rather than correction society ultimately pays the price.
The current state of many cells and jails is deeply troubling. Overcrowding poor ventilation lack of proper bedding bedbugs mosquitoes inadequate lighting and unsanitary conditions have become normalized. These conditions punish beyond what the law prescribes and undermine justice itself. Decent clean and humane incarceration is a constitutional duty and a moral obligation of government.
Prison reform must be treated as a national priority because a society is judged by how it treats those in its custody. It is time to restore dignity humanity and justice to incarceration.



