Pollsmoor Prison, Cape Town (CNN) Before we even see the cell, we can smell it. It's the suffocating stench of 86 men squeezed into a room built for 19.
A warden shoves a key into a rusted iron grate. "Get back," he shouts. The inmates stumble backwards to allow the door to swing open. The cell is a rectangular room with bunk beds stacked three tiers high. In one corner the detainees share a toilet and cold shower, but often the best they can do is a bucket.
Some detainees are dressed in regulation yellow garb, some in various levels of undress. It's summer and it's stifling in here. In winter it's brutally cold. The detainees say they are let outside to exercise once a week at best. Skin diseases are endemic; catching tuberculosis is extremely likely.
And none of the men has been convicted. "The worst thing is to see how the people must lie lay here on the floor next to each other at night," says Clive, who has been here for two years and two months awaiting trial. "Animals could live like this, but not human beings."
Some, like Clive, get stuck here because of endless trial delays, some because they can't afford bail of as little as 50 Rand (less then $5), some because they are foreign nationals waiting to get deported.
"We don't invite them here as correctional services. They come here because they do alleged crimes," says Cecil John Jacobs, the acting head of the remand facility. But observers say the problems here are endemic and reflect a South African criminal justice system in crisis. "It's a 20-year problem, with no end in sight in terms of conditions and the sheer numbers that they detain," says Clare Ballard, an attorney with Lawyers for Human Rights, who are suing the South African government.
A bland facade with a troubling history
The chipped green entrance to Pollsmoor Prison welcomes visitors and inmates alike to "a place of new beginnings." Flanked by a luxury wine estate and a wealthy neighborhood of Cape Town, the sprawling complex looks out of place.
But the face-brick and concrete facade predate the suburbs. Opened in the early 1960s, Pollsmoor's most famous prisoner arrived here in 1982. Nelson Mandela said the prison had a "modern face, but a primitive heart."
Mandela and top-tier political prisoners were housed together in a single cell and weren't allowed to mix with the common prisoners. In his autobiography, the future president of South Africa speculated that they were brought to the facility to stop them influencing other political prisoners on Robben Island.
Jacobs, then a low-level warden, saw Mandela only once. "He was being escorted by guards, someone had to point him out to me," he says. Back then, images of the ANC leader were banned in South Africa.
At the time, wardens of color were often confined to the guard towers and with rights not much better than many of the prisoners they watched over. The conditions even then were so bad that even Mandela contracted tuberculosis.
Jacobs says that the legacy of apartheid-era prisons -- which were designed to break black prisoners instead of rehabilitating them -- continues to taint the system more than twenty years into democracy. "This prison was built for people like me," says Jacobs.
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