Maïmouna Diouf served a number of years in a ladies’s jail, discovered responsible of infanticide, a cost she denies. She says situations had been harsh — soiled mattresses on the ground, an absence of enough meals and hygiene merchandise. She now volunteers to assist feminine inmates.
Ricci Shryock for NPR
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Ricci Shryock for NPR
The primary time she entered the jail, she felt as if she had been going to faint.
The 12 months was 2021. Maïmouna Diouf had been discovered responsible of infanticide — a cost she denies, claiming she gave delivery to a stillborn baby that she buried with out notifying the authorities.
Diouf regarded round her shared room within the Thies detention heart in Thies, Senegal. She was considered one of 10 prisoners assigned to sleep within the small area. There have been soiled, previous mattresses on the ground, she says. There was a odor coming from them that she couldn’t precisely place. “That is my life now? How am I alleged to sleep right here?” she thought to herself.
Launched in 2025, Diouf now volunteers to assist feminine inmates in Senegal. The situations that girls in jail face had been highlighted in occasions held in Senegal on Worldwide Girls’s Day this previous week — together with the distribution of free, reusable menstrual merchandise, which are not available to prisoners. Diouf agreed to share her story to convey consideration to the problems that have an effect on the nation’s roughly 280 ladies prisoners — about 2% of the whole jail inhabitants of 14,000.
Ladies and men charged with against the law in Senegal are on the mercy of a system the place justice will not be speedily allotted. Based on a report launched in 2024 by the U.S. State Division, “judicial backlogs and absenteeism of judges resulted in a mean wait of two years between the submitting of fees and the start of a trial.” Throughout this era of limbo, an estimated 60% of these charged are stored in jail. Girls are held within the Liberte VI jail for ladies in Dakar.
“It’s extremely tough for these ladies, particularly the ladies who’re harmless, however they’re in jail ready for trial. They generally do not need the means to have a lawyer, and in Senegal there’s a lack of judges so that may delay the trial, too,” says Seynabou Dieme, the top of social-education providers on the Liberte VI ladies’s jail.
Dieme confirmed some ladies have waited as much as six years for his or her trial to start.
Based on Senegalese press, the federal government adopted a regulation in February geared toward jail reforms that would come with bettering jail situations. NPR known as related authorities workplaces to verify this report and verify on the standing of reforms however obtained no reply.
An added burden for ladies
After which there’s the matter of stigma.
“The tradition usually says {that a} lady has no proper to commit an error. As a result of the lady should handle the home and group and lift the youngsters. If she falls, she brings the entire household down,” says Dieme.
Based on a 2021 report by the group Jail Insiderwhich screens situations in Senegal’s prisons, practically half of feminine prisoners in detention had been discovered responsible of infanticide, and 23% had been incarcerated for abortion, which is prohibited in Senegal besides in circumstances the place the process would save the lifetime of the pregnant lady.
The character of the crimes that girls are charged with provides to the stigma, says Fatou Faye. She’s a supervisor for the Jail Challenge at Tostan, a Senegalese group that distributed the hygiene pads on Worldwide Girls’s Day and that teaches inmates about human rights in addition to sensible abilities to generate revenue in jail and after launch – dying material and stitching, for instance. Faye additionally runs household mediations to assist former detainees rebuild relationships after launch.
Fatou Faye is a a supervisor for the jail venture run by Tostan, a Senegal-based human rights group. She says she want to see a extra forgiving public perspective towards ladies who’ve been accused or convicted of crimes: “They’re all human, and she will be able to do one thing she regrets. So she ought to have an opportunity to have a clear slate.”
Ricci Shryock for NPR
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Ricci Shryock for NPR
Diouf says she was fortunate — she nonetheless had the help of her household after being sentenced — which made an enormous distinction whereas serving her time. Her brother had dropped her off at jail that first day, noticed the previous mattresses in her cell and provided to convey her a brand new one. Relations additionally introduced her further meals and important feminine hygiene merchandise, which the state doesn’t all the time present.
Household help — and rejection
From her expertise, Maïmouna Diouf reiterates what prisoner educator Dieme says: Many ladies are rejected by their households even earlier than they’re sentenced.
“They had been all the time crying, as a result of it is tough to be rejected by your individual household,” she added of fellow prisoners whom she turned shut with whereas she was incarcerated.
Even when relations do wish to help a cherished one in jail, they might face societal strain to face again. That was the expertise of AF, who served 4 years for having an abortion. She requested to be recognized solely by her initials due to the persevering with stigma of getting been in jail.
It was 2001. AF was a younger mom who turned pregnant and felt she couldn’t help a second baby, so she determined to have a clandestine abortion. The process triggered issues and bleeding; when she was taken to the hospital the well being care employees reported to the police that she had an abortion.
AF says her mom and sister wished to supply help, however group and different relations – together with uncles — urged them to desert her. “They stored saying I used to be a foul lady, and did not deserve their help,” she says. However her mom and sister insisted on persevering with to help AF — offering not solely materials items like meals and cleaning soap however providing emotional help as effectively, promising they’d welcome her again as soon as she was launched.
“It was painful to look at them (her mother and sister) undergo,” she says. “Whereas I might do nothing from contained in the jail.” She says she’s grateful her sister and mom didn’t cave into the strain and helped her discover work and help as soon as she was launched. After she was launched in 2005, AF started working with Tostan’s prison-based group schooling program to assist incarcerated ladies put together for all times after jail.
Fatou Faye, a supervisor for the charity Tostan’s jail venture, enters a ladies’s jail in Dakar, Senegal for an Worldwide Girls’s Day occasion.
Ricci Shryock for NPR
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Ricci Shryock for NPR
Life after freedom
For ladies in jail, says AF, the stigma carries on even after launch.
“There are ladies who had been in jail, and after they get out, their households don’t welcome them. Usually they flip to crime, so that they find yourself coming again to jail,” she says. “Households and communities ought to have a mentality of pardoning and of serving to.”
Faye, the supervisor for the Jail Challenge at Tostan, agreed that she want to see the general public perspective towards ladies accused or convicted of crimes to be considered one of acceptance to assist them reenter society. And considered one of forgiveness.
“They’re all human, and she will be able to do one thing she regrets,” Faye says of the common prisoner. “So she ought to have an opportunity to have a clear slate.”
Ricci Shryock is a author and photographer in Dakar, Sénégal. This September, Cassava Republic will publish her nonfiction novel about one lady’s expertise as one of many feminine fighters throughout a struggle for independence in Guinea-Bissau within the Sixties.
