˝LIBERALISING PROSECUTION˝
MARCH 12 2010 15:09h
Text
The scheme is in line with the government´s policy of ´liberalising penal prosecution˝ and ˝defining new methods of re-socialisation.˝
TBILISI, March 12, 2010 (AFP) - Georgian criminals could be swapping prison uniforms for cassocks under a new scheme to allow offenders to serve out their sentences in monasteries.
The project, unveiled by penal and church officials Friday, will allow "convicts to have the possibility of serving sentences in monasteries instead of prisons," the prisons ministry said in a statement.
A committee made up of representatives of the general prosecutors' office, the prisons ministry and the Georgian Orthodox Church Patriarchate will find and select potential candidates among convicts, the statement said.
It said the scheme is in line with the government's policy of "liberalising penal prosecution" and "defining new methods of re-socialisation" of convicts.
The project also appears aimed at addressing severe prison overcrowding in Georgia, a mountainous ex-Soviet republic of 4.4 million people bordering Russia and Turkey.
In a report last year, Prison Reform International said nearly 20,000 people were serving time in Georgian prisons, a 300 percent increase since 2004, and that many institutions were operating far above their official capacity.
Comment



Israel Separation Barrier Bethelehem
Pro-Putin electtion rally in Moscow
Young Fan Throws Football During Super Bowl XLVI N
Iran Oil Minister holds News Conference in Tehran,
Rare visitors from the Artic, Snowy Owls, make ap
Monlam festival begins at the Labrang Monastery in
Actor Jason Segel shows off pudding pot at Harvard
Cost of Living Rises in Iran
Obama visits Fire station in Arlington
Protesters Clashes With Security Forces in Egypt
SCIENCE
SCIENCE
SCIENCE