Marie Lumane Laurore broke into piercing screams as she collapsed in a church pew before the coffin of her son, Eddy. The 30-year-old inmate fell ill with tuberculosis and severe anemia while he was jailed in Haiti's filthy and overcrowded National Penitentiary on a rape charge.
"Jesus, give me back my son! He was my only boy," she sobbed, banging her fists against a wooden pew in a Catholic church in downtown Port-au-Prince.
It was the third funeral service for National Penitentiary inmates organized by Port-au-Prince chief prosecutor Danton Leger since April. It came a day after The Associated Press published an exclusive report on overcrowding, malnutrition and infectious disease inside Haiti's lockups.
Recurrent shortages of food and medicine as well as infectious diseases that flourish in packed Haitian lockups have led to an upsurge in malnutrition-related illnesses and other preventable diseases.
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She called on Haitian authorities to urgently improve the situation, saying it was "the responsibility of the state to ensure respect for the rights of detainees and access to basic services."
Similar calls have gone unheeded for years and dismal prison conditions worsened over the last year as a caretaker government was in power.
Ludjy Belizaire said she visited her incarcerated 25-year-old brother Etzer as often as she could over the last year, especially when he started complaining that he was weak with hunger and getting sick. He began shedding weight rapidly.
The 22-year-old woman said that even if her older brother had broken the law he didn't deserve to be jailed for years without a conviction in unsanitary, desperate conditions.