Yahoo – AFP,
Santiago TORRADO, October 5, 2017
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| Colombian inmates serving customers at El Interno, a restaurant in the San Diego jail in Cartagena (AFP Photo/Raul Arboleda) |
Cartagena
(Colombia) (AFP) - Arleth Martinez smooths her clothes, kisses a photo of her
twins and leaves for work. It's only a few meters from her Colombian cell to
her unusually fragrant workplace, South America's first gastronomic prison
restaurant.
Following
the example of South Africa's Pollsmoor Prison, where Nelson Mandela wound down
his 27-year sentence, and another in Milan, inmates at the teeming women's
prison in downtown Cartagena are getting a taste for reintegration back into
society with an experience that mixes cuisine with customer service.
The photo
of the seven-year-old twins is Arleth's "lucky charm" -- a constant
reminder of the future.
Sentenced
to six years for extortion in 2015, present-day life in the San Diego prison
has become a little more palatable since she started working at the restaurant
late last year.
"Even
though I'm still in prison, I feel free because it's a completely different
environment," said the 26-year-old, wearing a pristine black t-shirt and
apron, her hair gathered in a colorful pink turban. At least around the
restaurant "you don't see so many bars".
Fifteen of
the 150 inmates, most of them accused of murder or drug trafficking, work
either in the kitchen, or in table service. The work is incentivised -- two
days washing dishes, preparing or serving food, gets a day of prison time
reduced.
![]() |
Colombian
inmates serving customers at El Interno, a restaurant in the San
Diego jail in
Cartagena (AFP Photo/Raul Arboleda)
|
A second
chance
A fuchsia
curtain separates the 50-seat restaurant from the cells. A mural of flowers
painted by the inmates provides some colorful relief from the drab prison
surroundings.
Named
"El Interno," which roughly translates as "The Intern," the
eatery provides a little extra frisson for curious locals and tourists while
they enjoy a 30-dollar menu that runs from "fish ceviche in coconut
milk" to "rice with seafood" and "posta Cartagenera"
-- meat in black sauce typical of the city.
"When
they arrive, people know that they are entering a prison, and that they will be
served by prisoners," said Johana Bahamon, a Colombian television actress
whose Accion Interna (Internal Action) Foundation was the driving force behind
the idea.
"When
they leave, they are happy to have met talented, courageous and real human
beings," Bahamon told AFP.
El Interno
is a rare opportunity for inmates in a country that has the largest prison
population in South America after Brazil.
![]() |
Colombian
inmate Arleth Martinez shows photos of her twins in the San Diego
jail in
Cartagena, Colombia (AFP Photo/Raul Arboleda)
|
In the last
17 years, the number of those behind bars in Colombia has more than doubled
from 51,500 to 119,000, according to the International Committee of the Red
Cross (ICRC).
Tougher
sentences and an increase in convictions for drug trafficking have filled
Colombia's 138 prisons to well beyond their combined 80,000 capacity.
Bahamon
believes that women in these overcrowded prisons badly need to be offered a
fresh start.
It's a
recurring theme at the restaurant.
"Yo
creo en las segundas oportunidades" (I believe in second chances) is
emblazoned on Arleth's black T-shirt and inscribed on the signs on the walls
pointing to the colorful eatery.
Bahamon
said she was inspired by InGalera, a public restaurant run by Italian prisoners
which set up in the parking lot of a Milan prison a few years ago.
She
convinced the authorities to adapt the concept to the San Diego prison, located
right in the tourist heart of Cartagena, a few meters from the luxurious hotels
that abound around the old Colonial city's historic port.
For well-to-do
customers like Antonio Galan, from the capital Bogota, "everything has a
flavor and aroma of freedom, from the taste of the dishes to the ambiance of
the restaurant."
25 to a
cell
Thus, in
the evenings at least, Arleth is surrounded by well-heeled influencers,
personalities and media officials, who stand in solidarity with the cause.
![]() |
Like other
prisons in Colombia, San Diego is overcrowded. Some 150 women
share a space designed
for just 100 (AFP Photo/Raul Arboleda)
|
El Interno
offers gourmet dinners from Tuesday to Sunday. But when it closes at 11:00 pm,
it's back to the mundane reality of answering roll call in their prison cells
for Arleth and her fellow inmates.
Like other
prisons in Colombia, San Diego is overcrowded. Some 150 women, many of whom are
awaiting trial, share a space designed for just 100.
When she
came to San Diego, Arleth said she got the shock of her life, as she had to
come to terms with the prison drug abuse, poor hygiene, and a dilapidated
building.
For four
months she slept on the floor, 25 to a cell. She was anxious for her children,
entrusted to their grandmother. Their father, she says, mistreated and
abandoned his family.
But last
year she passed her secondary school exams and trained as a waitress in the
prison. Her work at the restaurant has earned her the right to a rare luxury
here -- a bunk in a cell.
In prison,
"only warriors" survive, she said.
A taste of freedom in Colombian women's prison - South America's first gastronomic prison restaurant #AccionInterna pic.twitter.com/6zihu5nVt9— AFP news agency (@AFP) October 5, 2017




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