Republic of the Congo
Capital city — Brazzaville
Incarceration rate (per 100,000 inhabit…
i09/2019Country population
i2022Type of government
Human Development Index
0.571(153/191)
i2021/ UNDP, Human development summaryHomicide rate (per 100,000 inhabitants)
Data not disclosed
Name of authority in charge of the pris…
Ministry of Justice, Human Rights and t…since 1991
Total number of prisoners
1,600This figure corre…
i02/09/2022/ prison serviceAverage length of imprisonment (in mont…
Data not disclosed
Prison density
313 %The cited prison…
Total number of prison facilities
An NPM has been established
Female prisoners
2.1 %This figure corre…
i02/09/2022/ prison serviceIncarcerated minors
4.2 %This figure corre…
i02/09/2022/ prison servicePercentage of untried prisoners
66.4 %This figure does…
i02/09/2022/ prison serviceDeath penalty is abolished
Special populations
Women
Female prisoners
This figure corresponds to the number of women held in penitentiary facilities. It does not include women held as untried prisoners in police stations.
Variation in the number of female prisoners
decrease
The number of women decreased by 65.6% between 2009 and 2022. There were 99 women in prison in 2009.
Percentage of untried female prisoners
This figure does not include women held as untried prisoners in police stations.
Percentage of foreign female prisoners
Data not disclosed
There are no facilities reserved for women prisoners. Only the remand prisons of Brazzaville and Pointe-Noire have a dedicated section for women. At the Ouésso prison, they are held in a building with minors, separate from adult men. In other prison facilities, women are held in designated cells.
There is an effective separation between men and women
Men and women are not always effectively separated, even when women are assigned to districts or cells separate from adult men.
Civil society organisations signal that women are often victims of sexual abuse committed by other prisoners or by staff members. In Brazzaville, these organisations report that women sometimes turn to prostitution. Some guards allegedly provide male prisoners with access to the women’s district for a fee. Pregnancies during detention have been reported.
Untried female prisoners are separated from the convicted
The prison staff is
mostly male
The Correctional Code stipulates that “the women’s section must be under the supervision of a female staff member who will keep all the keys to this section of the prison. No male staff member may enter the women’s section without being accompanied by a female staff member. Only female staff members may monitor female prisoners. However, certain male staff members, in particular doctors and teachers, are allowed to perform their duties” (Article 5).
These provisions are not implemented.
The internal set of rules state that women and men can only be searched by staff members of the same sex (internal set of rules for remand prisons).
The Correctional Code stipulates that female prisoners must receive health care adapted to their needs. Female prisoners can request to be examined or treated by female doctors or nurses. These requests must be honoured if possible, except when the situation requires an emergency medical response. In this case, the examination can be performed by a man, in the presence of a female staff member (Article 90).
The authorities are required to guarantee women regular access to gynaecologists and education programmes on women’s health (Article 7).
In practice, female prisoners are “left to their own devices”, say civil society organisations. Their specific needs are not properly met.
Pregnant women are housed in specific units or cells
no
The legislation provides for a sentence adjustment for pregnant women or women with young children
The legislation does not provide for sentence adjustments for pregnant women or mothers of infants. These factors may nevertheless be taken into account by the sentence enforcement judge when a sentence adjustment is requested.
Childbirth takes place in
an external medical facility
The use of instruments of restraint is forbidden during labour and childbirth
Mothers are allowed to keep their children with them
yes, up to 2 years old
The Correctional Code stipulates that “the head of the prison facility, in coordination with social services, must organise the newborn’s placement in a location that can ensure the child’s care and education. If such a place cannot be identified, the incarcerated mother may keep her child with her up to the age of 2. The director general of the prison service may decide to extend this period by 12 months, based on individual assessments and the child’s best interests” (Article 66).
Children living with their mothers in detention do not have properly adapted facilities.
Minors
The law bans the imprisonment of minors
Minimum age of imprisonment for minors
13
Incarcerated minors
This figure corresponds to the number of minors held in remand prisons. It does not include those held as untried prisoners in police stations.
Ministry in charge of incarcerated minors
Ministry of Justice
Minors are subject to a specific justice system. They cannot be referred to ordinary criminal courts. They are only triable in juvenile court or juvenile criminal court (Code of Criminal Procedure, Article 685). Each Court of First Instance and each sessions court must have a judge or court for minors (Article 691).
The law on the protection of children states that deprivation of liberty must be a measure of last resort (Law No. 4-2010 on the protection of children in the Republic of the Congo, Article 80). The following measures must be favoured, either individually or in combination with each other:
- order for assistance, guidance and surveillance
- intervention by social services
- fines, damages and restitution
- intermediate or other regime
- probation
- participation in group guidance meetings and other similar activities.
Minors do not have dedicated juvenile facilities. Boys and girls are sometimes held in separate cells or mixed in with adults.
The Brazzaville remand prison has two cells for minors. In Ouésso, incarcerated minors share a building with female prisoners. In Dolisie and Pointe-Noire, minors and adults are put together in the same cells.
Figures on minors in prison are published
on an irregular basis
Minors in prison are separated from adults
no
Juvenile prisoners are not separated from adults. They sometimes share cells or other areas of detention. Some prisons have specific sections for minors, but adults can still access them.
The law provides for single cell accommodation for minors
no
The law forbids solitary confinement for minors
The material conditions of imprisonment for minors are similar to those of adults, even in facilities where minors are separated from adults. Boys and girls may find themselves in dilapidated facilities that are overcrowded and poorly equipped.
Certain civil society organisations take action to help meet some of the needs of juvenile prisoners. Samusocial, for example, assists at the Pointe-Noire remand prison. The association handles meals and care for minors, many of whom were homeless orphans before their incarceration.
Other associations say they have had trouble gaining access to places of detention, as they have been unable to obtain the necessary authorisations from the prison service.
Observers state that minors have relatively better access to activities than adults.
The staff is not trained to deal with minors. Civil society organisations say that staff members are unfamiliar with legislation on protecting children.
Foreign prisoners
Number and percentage of foreign prisoners
Data not disclosed
The prison regulations are translated for foreign prisoners
-
Prisoners must be verbally informed of their rights and obligations in a language they understand, and in writing upon entrance into a prison facility (Correctional Code, Article 75).
Untried prisoners
Percentage of untried prisoners
This figure does not include untried prisoners held in custody in police stations.
Untried prisoners are separated from the convicted
As a rule, untried prisoners must be separated from convicted prisoners (Correctional Code, Article 62).
However, this clause is not applied, and untried prisoners and convicted prisoners are placed in the same cells.
The law provides for release on bail for untried prisoners
The law places limits on the duration of pre-trial detention. These limits differ depending on the type of offence. The Code of Criminal Procedure states that: “In corrections, when the maximum sentence provided for by law is under one year of imprisonment, the accused resident of the Congo cannot be sentenced beyond 15 days after their first appearance before the investigating judge, provided that the accused has not already been convicted either for a criminal offense or to an imprisonment of over three months without the possibility of parole for a common law offence” (Article 120).
Pre-trial imprisonment (also called preventive detention) must not exceed four months in all other cases. The investigating judge can extend placement in pre-trial imprisonment by issuing a reasoned order. This extension cannot exceed two additional months (Article 121).
In reality, many people have remained in custody beyond this legal duration. Some spend over a year in prison. These are therefore cases of unlawful preventive detention. Organisations such as Fédération internationale des ACAT (FIACAT) and ACAT Congo are leading efforts to combat this issue, particularly through awareness activities and advocacy with authorities.
The law does allow prisoners to appeal against remand detention. Provisional release can be requested in any case and at any point in the proceedings (Code of Criminal Procedure, Article 124).
Untried prisoners do not benefit from a special detention regime in line with the presumption of innocence. Many have spent several weeks or months in police stations, outside of the legal framework, before being released or transferred to a prison facility. In police stations, the prison conditions are even harsher than in remand prisons, particularly in terms of overcrowding and violence. In remand prisons, they share overcrowded dormitories with convicted prisoners.
Minorities or indigenous people
Data collection about prisoners’ minority or indigenous background is allowed
Data collection about persons belonging to indigenous groups is inconsistent both inside and outside of prisons. A 1984 census indicated that around 2.3% of Congolese people belonged to an indigenous people. “Indigenous” refers to diverse groups with different identities and languages and includes groups of hunters and gatherers.1
The Special Rapporteur on the rights of Indigenous Peoples visited the country in October 2019. She reported:
“No data is reportedly available on how many indigenous individuals have been arrested and detained in the criminal justice system. Civil society organisations, including conservation organisations, do not have data but they have reported that a disproportionate number of detainees in Ouesso prison are indigenous and that some of them were arrested in relation to their traditional hunting and gathering livelihood activities. When meat is found in their huts by ‘eco-guards’, indigenous individuals are immediately accused of poaching even if when the meat in question comes from animals that are not on the protection list. Most of those accused and imprisoned suffer from beatings and violence but do not have access to lawyers to defend them.”2
Congolese Human Rights Observatory (Observatoire congolais des droits de l’Homme), “Indigenous peoples of the Republic of the Congo: discrimination and enslavement, 2011, p. 9 (in French). ↩
United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, country report, “Visit to the Congo – Report of the Special Rapporteur on the right of indigenous peoples”, 10 July 2020, p. 16. ↩
There is no specific detention regime for prisoners belonging to indigenous groups. The Special Rapporteur also noted that “[…] indigenous persons held in detention were particularly malnourished, as, unlike most of the other prisoners, their families do not live in the vicinity and cannot therefore bring them food; the authorities apparently do not provide meals despite the fact that it is the State’s responsibility to do so.”1
United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, country report, “Visit to the Congo – Report of the Special Rapporteur on the right of indigenous peoples”, 10 July 2020, p. 16. ↩
The prosecution or imprisonment of a person on the grounds of their sexual orientation or gender identity is banned
The Penal Code (Article 331) prohibits sexual intercourse between members of the same sex if either participant is under the age of 21. This ban does not apply to opposite-sex couples. The notion of consent is not defined in the same manner for homosexual relations as for heterosexual ones.1
Civil society organisations have reported cases of blackmail in police stations. One organisation told Prison Insider: “Sometimes Article 331 is intentionally read to people in police custody without the end of the sentence, leading them to believe that all homosexual relationships are prohibited. However, few untried prisoners end up in remand prisons for this charge, since they are often released from the police station thanks to associations or relatives.”
International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans and Intersex Association, Aengus Carroll, ”State Sponsored Homophobia 2016: A World Survey of Sexual Orientation Laws: Criminalisation, Protection and Recognition”, May 2016, p. 34. ↩
Elderly prisoners
Number and percentage of elderly prisoners
Data not disclosed
The prison service is required to guarantee specific arrangements and care for elderly prisoners and for prisoners with disabilities (Correctional Code, Article 81).
Persons with disabilities
Prison facilities are adapted to the needs of prisoners with disabilities
no
The prison service is required to guarantee specific arrangements and care for elderly prisoners and for prisoners with disabilities (Correctional Code, Article 81).
Death penalty is abolished
yes, since 2015