A
Spanish woman has spent 9 months here and is still awaiting sentencing
on drug charges. Today she celebrates her birthday inside San Quintin.
"Show the smiling picture to my mom, she's so worried about me." Bello,
Colombia April 24, 2001
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Bello, Colombia
April 24, 2001
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By US standards San Quintin is an old and ramshackle building. Some
cells have bars as in traditional jails. Others look more like workers'
barracks--plywood cubicles built by the prisoners themselves. But
compared with dungeon-like jails filled to more than twice their capacity
that I've visited in Haiti or El Salvador the atmosphere here is remarkably
relaxed despite the overcrowding.
Almost all the prisoners here are men, but there are 8 female inmates
in a women's wing. All prisoners wear their own clothes and move about
freely within their area of the institution. There
is a broom factory employing inmates, there are classes, and there
is a radio program run by prisoners who receive journalism training
and technical support from the University of Antioquia.
It is clear to me that the "developing democracy" here is
far from perfect. It isn't easy for leaders accustomed to exercising
power with firepower and fear to learn the ways of persuasion and negotiation.
Whether the San Quintin process can transfer the developing spirit of
"convivencia" in the jail to the complex world of Bello's
streets in a lasting way remains to be seen. But the effort to do so
is a courageous step.
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