#Headlines

Gov’t to build ‘modern 2,000‑capacity prison’ in Brikama

Jun 24, 2026, 9:03 AM | Article By: Makutu Manneh

Mile Two Prison, once infamously dubbed the “Five‑Star Hotel” by former President Yahya Jammeh, is now set to be a correctional facility. The current government, under the leadership of President Adama Barrow, has announced plans to construct a modern correctional facility in Brikama with capacity for 2,000 inmates—a move welcomed as both humane and necessary.

The announcement was made by Lamin Jatta, Deputy Permanent Secretary at the Ministry of Interior, during the opening of a human rights training programme for prison officers. He revealed that a site known as Nyambikala in Brikama has already been secured for the new facility, which will place strong emphasis on rehabilitation and skills development.

“In a matter of months, or hopefully within a year, Mile Two will no longer be Mile Two,” Jatta declared. “There is a facility that has already been secured in Brikama called Nyambikala, with the capacity to house 2,000 inmates. These inmates will be trained in various skills so that when they leave, they can contribute meaningfully to society.”

Jatta further disclosed that the Gambia Prison Service will be transformed into a Correctional Service, marking a decisive shift from punishment to rehabilitation and reintegration.

“The Gambia Prison Service will no longer be the Gambia Prison Service. It is going to be a Correctional Service,” he said.

He also revealed that a new Prison Service Bill, now in its final stages before submission to the National Assembly, contains key reforms aimed at improving conditions for both inmates and correctional officers.

“There are many provisions embedded in the Prison Service Bill that will benefit correctional officers as well as inmates,” Jatta stated.

The senior Interior Ministry official stressed that prisons should not be seen purely as places of punishment.

“They are not there to be punished; they are there to be corrected,” he said. “Even if a person is a criminal, there is still an opportunity for reform.”

The move to Brikama is expected to ease overcrowding and improve living conditions, addressing long‑standing complaints from inmates about Mile Two’s mosquito‑infested environment and poor facilities.

With rehabilitation and skills training at the heart of the new correctional model, the government hopes to turn incarceration into an opportunity for transformation—ensuring that those who leave prison can reintegrate and contribute positively to Gambian society.