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This Article is From Jun 26, 2019

Indonesia Eyes Remote Islands to Relocate Its Overcrowded Jails

(Bloomberg) -- Indonesian prisons are overflowing with convicts and authorities worried about their negative influence on city dwellers are exploring shifting them to some of the uninhabited islands in the archipelago.

Overcrowded jails mean petty criminals like chicken thieves are lodged together with drug traffickers and terrorists, according to Indonesia's Coordinating Minister for Politics, Legal, and Security Affairs Wiranto. The inability to segregate inmates based on their crime poses risks of them “exchanging their expertise” with each other, he said.

Deadly Jakarta Riots Revive Fears of Renewed Sectarian Violence

Construction of new prisons in remote islands will also reduce the scope of inmates coming into contact with the public, the minister told a panel of lawmakers in Jakarta on Tuesday. With most jails located in the middle of cities, it was easy for inmates to engage in nefarious activities, the Cabinet Secretariat said in a statement citing Wiranto, a former military chief.

Indonesia can use some of the 6,000 uninhabited islands to relocate its crowded jails, Wiranto said.

While Indonesian jails have a total capacity to accommodate only 127,006 people, they currently lodge 263,145 inmates, according to the Law and Human Rights Ministry.

To contact the reporter on this story: Tassia Sipahutar in Jakarta at ssipahutar@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Thomas Kutty Abraham at tabraham4@bloomberg.net, Ruth Pollard

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.

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