A Norwegian prison, click here for more pictures |
In jail the retired would have:
- Permanent companionship
- Hot meals every day and on time
- Free juridical assistance.
- Every day access to bathing, time off and walks
- No need to make food, go shopping, washing the dishes, cleaning the house or washing clothes
- All the necessary medicine and regular access to health services for free
- No need to pay rent
- Permanent 24/7 video surveillance, and included immediate emergency assistance in case of accident or other need
- Bedding changed twice a week and clothes washed and ironed with regularity
- Every twenty minutes a visit by a guard. Any correspondence or messages to be handed over personally
- A dedicated place for receiving family and other visitors
- Access to library, exercise room, physical therapy and a chapel
- Visits by a priest and volunteers if so desired
- Encouragement to take up a profession or a study, including adequate installations, teachers and equipment for free
- Free clothes and products for personal hygiene
- The right to live in a private and very secure building, with protected yard for exercise and socializing
- Access to reading, computer, television, radio and telephones
- Access to secretarial pool, psychologists, social workers, politicians, journalists, Amnesty international etc. - all available for listening concerning complaints
- All employees, such as guards and secretaries, obliged to observe a strict code of conduct or risk harsh punishment.
- Guaranteed adherence to all human rights according to treaties signed and observed by Portugal.
- 200 euros to live on a month in a small home or room, having no maintenance or improvements done the last 50 years
- Nobody to clean
- Food only if made, often cold and with irregularity
- Clothes bought only with own money needing cleaning and repairs
- Living alone with no surveillance
- Forget to eat and take necessary medicine, and nobody around to help
- From time to time to be cheated, conned, robbed or even assaulted physically
- Possibility of dying without anybody noticing for months or even years
- To die after waiting months or years for a doctor's appointment or a surgical procedure.
- To be ignored by politicians and institutions
- Nobody to complain to
- Baths only every two weeks with a risk of falling and getting hurt in the old bathtub
- Passing a miserable time in winter due to not being able to afford heating
- The daily entertainment would be soap operas on the TV
The brilliant comparisons and the idea above are not mine. A big hat tip and thanks for the permission to reproduce in English to the blog: Apodrecetuga
75% of the 2,5 million retired in Portugal live on the equivalent of minimum salary or less. The minimum pensions are either 189, 227, or 246 euros per month. More than one million pensioners receive a sub-subsistence minimum pension. They are the real poor in Portugal. It is basically impossible to live on minimum salary not to mention a minimum pension in one of the large cities considering rent, electricity, water, gas, food, medicine and so on. The situation is beyond shameful. Considering the money lost due to corruption and carelessness, the absurd number of public constructions such as highways and roundabouts - the situation is criminal.
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ReplyDeleteDepois de conhecer e visitar o link das prisões da Noruega que colocou aqui no BLOG, sinto me tentada a ir para a Noruega cometer um crime com uma pena perpetua... Quando puder agradeço que divulgue as leis que tenho que violar para ter acesso a esse conforto. Muitos idosos de Portugal e mesmo outros vão querer emigrar em massa para a Noruega.
ReplyDeleteMas dê uma vista de olhos nesta prisão exemplar do Arizona, USA.
http://apodrecetuga.blogspot.com/2011/06/treinador-de-politicos-contrata-se.html
I think you have to do something rather serious. Embezzling is a big deal in Denmark - probably Norway as well as the societies are very similar. However, the prison shown in Norway is closed prison, supposedly for hardened criminals. It looks amazing, but the Norwegians claim they work. I have been in lots of hotels looking much worse. :-D
ReplyDeleteWhite collar criminals and other non violent offenders are usually put in open jails. They resemble holiday camps more than prisons.
To get into a closed jail, something serious would have to be committed. Or you can just commit a small crime. Get into an open jail and then run away a few times. Then they will put you in a closed jail...
I had read about the jail in Arizona. I am all in favor for sending hardened criminals such as corrupt politicians there.
Concerning young people, first time offenders and light criminals society should try to do nearly anything to rehabilitate. It is not worth the effort on hardened criminals IMHO. Also I think when the crime is serious - revenge is part of justice.