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Friday, 21, April, 2006 (23, Rabi` al-Awwal, 1427) 


Prisoners Want Courts Inside Jail Premises 
Arab News —


RIYADH, 21 April 2006 — Kasim was a member of the Commission for the
Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice before he was arrested and
detained pending trial for shooting a man who tried to enter a girls'
school last year. Now he has entered a judicial system that most
officials agree moves at a snail's pace.

Kasim denies shooting the man and says the biggest hurdle to his
defense is simply being unable to see the judge. "The first time I
appeared in court my hearing was re-scheduled for months even though
witnesses had appeared that day to say that I was not the shooter,"
Kasim told Al-Riyadh newspaper.

Fuad Muhammad has been defending himself against the wrongful killing
of a Sudanese expatriate. He said it took him two years to see a judge
for the first time. Then, because no representative of the deceased
showed up in court, the hearing was postponed. 

"What I want is for them to speed up my case," said Fuad, adding that
he wonders how many more years he is going to wait behind bars before
a decision is made in his case.

Kasim and Fuad are two of a growing number of prisoners that are
asking for their cases to be expedited by bringing the courts closer
to the prisons themselves. 

He says that there are places inside the prison that are appropriate
to be courtrooms suitable for the judicial procedures and the judges.

Kasim says that there are many innocent people inside the prisons
waiting for their day in court, while, outside, their jobs are filled
by others and their families suffer. 

The idea of incorporating courts inside prisons has been backed by the
Interior Ministry. However, the Justice Ministry disagrees saying that
the prisons are not an appropriate venue for judicial procedures. This
disagreement has gone on for months. 

The Interior Ministry also cited security concerns in transporting
prisoners to courts.

Some prisoners have been quoted in the media as saying that they would
prefer not to be publicly embarrassed by being frog-marched in
handcuffs as they are transported, in some cases considerably long
distances, to and from the courtroom over a period of months and
sometimes years. 

Finally a royal edict was declared: A compromise that places courts
next door to prisons, but not inside them. 

The Al-Riyadh report quoted prisoners overwhelmingly in support of
bringing courts closer to them. All the prisoners cited in the report,
like Kasim, supported placing the courts inside prisons themselves. 

Muhammad A., 21, sentenced to 15 years in prison for break-in and
rape, has appealed the sentence but is in jail pending a final
verdict. He said to Al-Riyadh that there is a desperate need for more
courts, and he called specifically for courts inside the prisons that
would give prisoners more access to the judicial system. 

"(Expediting the judicial procedures) will not happen unless there are
courts inside prisons," said Muhammad. "We are suffering a lot from
court delays. These delays are caused because there are not enough
judges on one hand and on the other hand an increasing number of
cases. Establishing courts inside prisons would help in speeding up
the review of backlogged cases. My case was delayed for months. Every
time a person goes before a judge, there is some kind of delay. The
time between hearings is at least two months in all cases, and
sometimes more."






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