Govt mulls garment factories in jails

Afp, Dhaka
The prison authorities yesterday announced plans to set up garment factories in the country's overcrowded jails in a bid to help convicts acquire skills and make money. The project, which has not yet been approved by the government, aims to set up factories first in major prisons before expanding to all Bangladesh's 68 jails, said Deputy National Prison Chief Iftekharul Islam. "The aim is to impart life skills to the country's prisoners. Garment jobs would also help them earn a good amount of money that will be handy when they finish their term," he told AFP. The home ministry, which oversees the country's prisons, is in favour of the plan, Islam said, which will need formal approval from the government before coming into effect. Bangladesh has a prison population of more than 60,000 people including nearly 1,000 inmates on death row. The country's prisons are chronically overcrowded, rights groups say. Islam said most prisons already had small workshops where convicts make craft items for sale, but said producing clothes, which will be sold in local markets and not exported, would be more financially rewarding. Bangladesh is the world's third-largest garment exporter after China and Turkey with export shipments surging more than 40 percent to $15 billion over the last 10 months.