World

Sri Lanka moves to address prison overcrowding

July 10, 2026 12:53 pm

[Source: Reuters]

Sri Lanka’s efforts ‌to reduce prison overcrowding by reopening a colonial jail and recruiting more staff after a deadly riot left 28 people dead need to be underpinned by a commitment to international best practice, human rights advocates said.

Eight prison officials and 20 prisoners died ​in two days of fighting between two groups of inmates at the prison in the coastal town ​of Negombo, about 35 km (20 miles) north of the commercial capital, Colombo, authorities said.

The ⁠clash was Sri Lanka’s worst since 2012.

Overcrowding was a key reason for the riot, advocates told Reuters, noting the ​problem was chronic in Sri Lanka. The Negombo prison was built to house about 650 inmates but held around ​2,400 when the violence broke out.

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Overall, Sri Lankan jails hold about 41,000 people or nearly 400% more than the facilities are supposed to accommodate, authorities said.

The country has 22 prisons.

“Prisoners refer to their sleep arrangements as “salmon packing” where they have to sleep lying end-to-end ​in shifts at night,” said Rasika Gunawardana, a project manager at the Committee for Protecting Rights of Prisoners.

“Some ​prisoners, including women, have to sleep inside toilets. There is no privacy to even change clothes.”

Prisons have also been strained by anti-drug ‌campaigns ⁠with offenders rising from 9,344 in 2021 to 31,314 in 2024, making up 65.5% of the total prison population, latest data from the Department of Prisons showed.

“What you need to do is prevent people from coming into conflict with the law, prevent people from being incarcerated, and do something about over-incarceration,” said Ambika Satkunanathan, former commissioner of the Human ​Rights Commission of Sri ​Lanka.

“The evidence in other countries ⁠shows that harm reduction services, opioid substitution therapy (and) community-based, evidence-based treatment options work to address drug dependence.”

HOTEL PLANS REVERSED

Plans to recruit about 1,300 prison staff have been slow ​due to bureaucracy and prison jobs being unattractive, Minister of Justice and National Integration Harshana ​Nanayakkara told parliament.

“People ⁠from good schools are not applying to the prisons anymore. Job requests have decreased drastically,” he said.

The ministry is also reversing plans to convert an old colonial prison, closed in 2014, into a hotel and will move about 2,000 ⁠prisoners ​there instead.

A section of a closed hospital in the southern town of ​Galle will also be used to house prisoners and plans are underway to build a new jail within a navy camp on the outskirts of Colombo.

Sri Lanka ​is also reviewing legislation to allow house arrest for low-risk remand prisoners.