Prisons in Ukraine

Prisons in Ukraine are regulated by the State Penitentiary Service of Ukraine, a part of the Ministry of Justice of Ukraine.

As of 2000[update], there are 32 preliminary prisons, 131 penitentiary establishments for adults and 8 colonies for minor criminals in Ukraine.[1] According to Amnesty International, torture and ill-treatment by the police is widespread in Ukrainian prisons.[2][3] Several police officers have been arrested for allegedly torturing detainees.[4]

Prison population

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In early 2010, there were over 147,000 people in prison and more than 38,000 in pre-trial detention facilities in Ukraine, a total three times that of Western European countries,[5] and half as much as in the United States. In 2009, the number of inmates in Ukraine rose for the first time in seven years. Coupled with this increase was a higher instance of suicide (44 prisoners) and HIV (761 deaths therefrom) in penal institutions during 2009; the former compares with 40 suicides in 2008.[5] Between 1996 and 2001, about 26 percent of inmates in various prisons across Ukraine tested HIV-positive. In a January 2006 study, between 15 and 30 percent of prisoners tested HIV-positive.[6] In early 2005, tests showed up to 95 percent of prisoners were hepatitis C positive.[6] In 2011, 6,000 inmates had HIV and 5,500 suffered from an active form of tuberculosis.[7]

In there were 2011 inmates who had been kept in pre-trial detention for up to 12 years; there was no legal limit as to length of such incarceration.[7]

According to Ukrainian authorities in January 2026 there were around 34,600 inmates in the entire Ukrainian penitentiary system.[8]

Conditions

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Convicts in Ukrainian prisons work 7 or 8 hours a day, except for weekends.[9] Prisoners get to keep part of the money raised from the sale of the items they produce.[9] They are limited to four pairs of shoes.[9] Computers, cell phones and other electronic gadgets are strictly forbidden in jail.[9] Bathing may be limited to once a week.[9]

According to the US Department of State Human Rights Report 2009, conditions in prisons and detention facilities in Ukraine are harsh, and pretrial detention was seen as arbitrary and lengthy.[10] According to Amnesty International, allegations of torture and ill treatment in police custody increased in 2010.[3]

In 2021 Amnesty International reported that the abuse of prisoners remained "endemic".[11]

In March 2022 the European Court of Human Rights had ruled against Ukraine in 115 cases .[11] The European Court found that Oleksandr Rafalsky had spent 15 years in prison despite good reasons to believe that his "confessions" had been extorted by torture.[12]

See also

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References

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