KARACHI: Seventy to 80 per cent of the inmates of the city’s four prisons are undertrial prisoners, many of them detained over minor and bailable offences, waiting for justice for a long time due to the slow nature of Pakistan’s legal system.

A speaker shared this at an event titled ‘A comprehensive training session for probation and parole staff and other relevant government officials on providing support to young people in prisons and under probation in Sindh’. The Society for the Protection of the Rights of the Child (Sparc) organized the programme on Thursday at a local hotel.

“There are approximately 9,640 inmates in the four prisons of Karachi ie Central Prison (4,218), District Prison and Correctional Facility at Malir (5,152), Women Prison (134), Youthful Offenders’ Industrial School Karachi (136). Of them 70 to 80 per cent of this population consists of undertrial prisoners including those who are detained under minor and bailable offences,” said Muhammad Kashif Mirza representing Sparc.

Highlighting efforts aimed at providing support to prisoners, he said the organisation in collaboration with the United Nations Development Prog­ramme, Sindh Education Found­ation and Sindh government was implementing a project focusing on the rehabilitation of young prisoners in District Prison Malir and Central Prison for Women Karachi. The intervention, he said, included market-based skill training and psychological counselling.

Home department additional chief secretary Dr Mohammad Usman Chachar said the government was reviewing the criminal justice system and taking steps to build capacity of the probation staff and other linked departments to improve support for youth.

Abdul Kabir Kazi representing the Sindh Education Foundation said the Youth Education, Employment and Empowerment Project being implemented in selected prisons would provide support to 15,000 youth in the province.

“The project also aims to serve the underprivileged segments of society. In addition, the foundation also intends to open 1,000 new schools as tasked by the chief minister,” he said.

Published in Dawn, January 30th, 2021

Opinion

Editorial

Banking inertia
Updated 13 Jul, 2026

Banking inertia

PRIME Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s latest call to banks to expand lending to SMEs is nothing new. Every government...
Justice imperilled
13 Jul, 2026

Justice imperilled

THE Human Rights Commission of Pakistan and the International Federation for Human Rights have raised concerns about...
Toxic staple
13 Jul, 2026

Toxic staple

A RECENT article published in Dawn has shed light on the challenges being faced by Sindh’s chilli farmers, whose...
Mixed messaging
Updated 12 Jul, 2026

Mixed messaging

In case the parleys fail, a return to full-scale war would be the likely outcome.
Way forward
12 Jul, 2026

Way forward

A GROUP of estranged PTI leaders, calling themselves the ‘National Dialogue Committee’ and led by figures like...
Recalled orders
12 Jul, 2026

Recalled orders

WHILE justice should be blind, it should not be oblivious to the human suffering some decisions may cause. This is...