A prisoner who was granted a special remission of sentence is back behind bars after breaking into a house and raping a woman because he was bored.
The man was released from a prison in Wepener, Free State (South Africa) on May 8 and allegedly committed housebreaking and rape offences on May 22.
According to the Department of Correctional Services, the man said he had committed the crimes because he had nothing to do.
The man is one of the 37 783 prisoners who were released from prisons across the country after President Jacob Zuma granted a remission of sentence to certain categories of prisoners. He is not the only one back in jail.
Within a month of their early release, 47 are already back behind bars for murder, rape, attempted murder, robbery, assault, kidnapping, theft, stock theft, possession of drugs, possession of stolen goods and housebreaking.
When asked why they committed the crimes so soon after their release, they have blamed boredom, homelessness, hunger, poverty, drug addiction and unemployment as the reason they re-offended.
One of the offenders arrested for theft said she had committed the crime intentionally to be re-arrested and put back in prison because she had nowhere to stay after her release.
The woman, who had been freed from Pretoria Female Correctional Services, was arrested for theft four days after her release.
Another man, who had initially been arrested for assault, committed murder just after being pardoned. The Thohoyandou, Limpopo, man had been out for only two days. "He is alleged to have gone home and found his girlfriend with another lover. A fight broke out and he is alleged to have killed the girlfriend's lover. He handed himself to the police, who arrested him, but he later committed suicide in the cells," said Department of Correctional Services spokeswoman Sibongile Khumalo.
One man, who was initially arrested for attempted murder, was released and re-arrested for attempted murder soon after gaining his freedom.
Another man from Beaufort West, Western Cape, who faces a charge of stock theft, said hunger was the reason for his crime. The animal he stole has not been specified but the man said there was no food at home and his family was hungry.
Many of the crimes committed are housebreakings and theft and, according to Khumalo, the re-offenders claimed that poverty, unemployment and the need to feed their drug habits drove them to commit the crime.
Another man, who was on parole for housebreaking and theft, was arrested a few hours after being freed. Khumalo said that as part of his conditions, Correctional Services officials used to check on him periodically at home. However, on May 9, they told him that he was now a free man and would no longer be getting visits. A few hours later, however, he was behind bars for housebreaking and theft.
Khumalo said that although the prisoners had been released in a gesture of humanity, those that had re-offended had spat in the face of the government which released them.
"And other departments are affected, too. The police have to hunt them and take them to police stations. The Justice Department has to invest time and efforts to bring the suspects to court and sentence them."
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