[lit-ideas] Re: Swedish Prisons

  • From: Carol Kirschenbaum <carolkir@xxxxxxxx>
  • To: lit-ideas@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Sun, 02 Jul 2006 16:59:26 -0700

Again, I'm ready to emigrate! Betcha the prison system in Sweden has a full 
rehabilitation program, too.
ck


  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: JimKandJulieB@xxxxxxx 
  To: lit-ideas@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
  Sent: Sunday, July 02, 2006 3:36 PM
  Subject: [lit-ideas] Swedish Prisons


  If I posted this before, apologies....I'm going through old mail and I don't 
think I passed this one on.  I wonder if they keep track of recidivism or 
rehabilitation.  I know people in America who would go out their way to commit 
a crime to get into such a prison.

  Julie Krueger

  Yedioth Ahronoth  June 12, 2006  www.ynetnews.com

  10:01 , 06.12.06
          
            
       
             
              Five-Star Hotel
             
              Israeli prison. Fails to match Swedish standards Photo: Yariv 
Katz 
             
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          Israelis enjoying life in Swedish prison

        Three Israelis jailed in Scandinavian country turn down offer to 
continue serving their sentence in homeland, explain 'here we are treated with 
steaks, sex and private television airing World Cup games for free'
        Itamar Eichner

        The Israeli prisoners in Sweden are unwilling to hear about a 
possibility of continuing to serve their sentence in an Israeli prison. The 
reason: Prisons in the Scandinavian country resemble a five-star hotel. 

        Israeli prisoners jailed worldwide usually beg authorities to extradite 
them to Israel in order to continue serving their sentence in their homeland. 
Despite their pleas, they are usually turned down. 



        In Sweden, however, it appears that the imprisonment conditions are so 
good that three Israelis jail there are not even considering leaving. Every 
prisoner has his own cell with a television airing the World Cup games for 
free; every six months, the prisoner gets to tour the streets of Stockholm 
accompanied by a police car; and the highlight â every prisoner has a the 
right to a three-day conjugal right in a three-room luxury apartment in the 
prison. 



        Israel and Sweden have signed an agreement enabling prisoners to serve 
the rest of their sentences in their homelands. 




        Jacob Shoshani, the Israeli consul-general to Stockholm, turned to the 
three Israelis held in the biggest Swedish prison Sodertalje, not far from the 
Swedish capital, and offered them to sign forms which will enable them to be 
transferred to an Israeli prison. He was surprised, however, when two of them 
avoided him and asked him to leave them alone and not bother them. 



        Sparkling clean cell, modern kitchen



        The prisoners provided him with multiple and diverse reasons for their 
decision: The prison cell is sparkling clean, and over the weekend the prison 
does not serve food and each prisoner is allowed to order a variety of raw 
materials at a limited budget in order to fix himself a meal. One of the 
Israelis even told the consul that every Saturday he prepares great steaks for 
his fellow prisoners. 



        The kitchen is modern and sophisticated, like in a restaurant. In 
addition, the prisoners are offered a variety of activities such as football 
and basketball games.



        Consul Shoshani approached one of the prison's commanders and asked why 
the prisoners are given such exaggerated conditions and whether this might not 
encourage people to commit crimes. 



        "I left with a feeling of a hotel, rather than a prison," Shoshani 
concluded in his report to the Foreign Ministry in Jerusalem.  

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