On 10 April 2020, footage shared by
Amnesty International revealed that detainees in a Cambodian prison are living in “inhumane conditions." With at least 25 prisoners lying on the floor of a single small cell, the prison is claimed to be extremely overcrowded and violates physical distancing requirements. It has been called a "ticking time bomb, especially during the coronavirus outbreak." The
quarantine measures amidst the COVID-19 pandemic severed the conditions in the
unsanitary and overcrowded
detention centers of
Latin America. The unavailability of food, which is usually provided by the relatives of inmates, led to a new set of upheaval in a
Venezuelan prison, inside the Los Llanos Penitentiary Centre (CEPELLA) in
Guanare. The eruption of
riot inside the prison killed at least 46 prisoners and injured over 70, including a national guard officer and a warden.
Human rights groups, including the
Amnesty International, called for the investigation and analyzation of the authorities’ deadly response. On May 19, 2020, 20 Human rights organizations sent a letter to the President of
Tanzania John Magufuli requesting to take necessary steps to tackle
COVID-19 situation in the congested prisons and also urged to ensure that the prisoners and detainees have proper access to a lawyer. The organizations that sent the letter includes, Legal and Human Rights Center in
Dar es Salaam,
Amnesty International, and
Human Rights Watch. On June 10, 2020, the
Human Rights Watch called out the authorities in
UAE to take urgent action ensuring the safety of prisoners in at least 3 detention centers amid
COVID-19 pandemic. The relatives of the prisoners at al-Wathba prison, al-Awir prison, and new al-Barsha detention center, informed the
HRW that some of the prisoners who were tested positive with
COVID-19 and many prisoners with chronic health conditions were denied proper medical aid. The prisons are overcrowded and the authorities have not maintained hygiene and proper sanitation, worsening the spread of the virus. On 20 July 2020,
Human Rights Watch reported
Egypt's prisons were experiencing surging cases with
COVID-19 and had killed at least 14 detainees. Authorities sought to stifle news of the virus spreading within prisons and arresting health workers, journalists, and critics who raised their voice regarding concerns over the government's handling of the pandemic. According to the report by a local human rights group, the leaked letter from 2 prisons and Human Rights Watch investigation, as of 15 July 2020 at least 10 detention facilities in Egypt have been infected with COVID-19 and about 14 prisoners have died after contracting the disease. The detainees have minimal access to medical care and no access to COVID-19 testing. Despite
Human Rights Watch warnings about the danger of unsanitary prison conditions in the US, the infection rate of prisoners was 5.5 times higher than that of the general population. Consequently, the death rate in prisons was higher compared to outside of prisons. In December 2020, the
Human Rights Watch revealed that
Saudi Arabia was keeping thousands of
African migrants under filthy conditions in its detention centers. Detainees, who were interviewed, reported that the Saudi authorities took no measures to control the spread of
COVID-19 inside the prison, even though some of them inside the facility showed the
COVID-19 symptoms. A report released by
Amnesty International highlighted torture and cruelty that the prisoners of conscience in Egyptian prisoners have been subjected to. The report, “
What do I care if you die?” Negligence and denial of health care in the Egyptian prisons” was released on the 10th anniversary of the
Arab uprising of 2011 in
Egypt. Besides the torture of men and women arrested for demanding social and political justice, the Amnesty report also threw light on the negligence of health care measures for the protection of prisoners against the
COVID-19 pandemic. Philip Luther, the Middle East and North Africa Research and Advocacy Director for Amnesty International told that the prison authorities let the prisoners rely on their families for food, medication, and basics like soap, and denied them medical care or timely transfer to the hospitals. In June 2021, a prominent human rights activist of
Bahrain, Husain Barakat (48) died in the country’s Jau Prison after contracting Covid-19. He had been fully vaccinated in March 2021. The incident led to rare protests in the country, where hundreds gathered for demonstrations that held King
Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa responsible for Barakat’s death due to improper care. Several human rights defenders and groups called it “systematic medical negligence”, where the Bahraini government was accused of ignoring the scale of the problem. Despite the high vaccination rate, Bahrain was facing a significant surge in the COVID-19 cases. The country depended on China's
Sinopharm BIBP vaccine which was incapable of inducing sufficient antibodies to protect from the virus. == Minority rights ==