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Should Inmates Get AC? South Korea’s $900K Prison Cooling Debate

Daniel Kim Views  

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The CEN News / Jeongmi Ban, Reporter | The Ministry of Justice plans to allocate about 1.2 billion KRW (roughly $900,000) this year to reinforce cooling systems in correctional facilities, a move that has ignited public debate.

Some ask, “Do people convicted of crimes even need air conditioning?” Others counter that protecting life and health during extreme heat is a core responsibility of the state.

Both perspectives are understandable.

Summers are different now. Record heat waves recur every year, and emergency-room visits for heat-related illnesses have risen sharply.

Correctional facilities, where many people live in close quarters, tend to trap heat more easily and for longer periods than typical residential spaces.

Jeongmi
Jeongmi Ban, Reporter

Temperatures in some housing units have exceeded 30°C (86°F), and authorities have reported cases of heat-related illness.

That does not mean public concern is unfounded.

Many households limit air-conditioning use because of rising electricity bills. Seniors living alone and other vulnerable groups struggle through the heat. From a taxpayer’s point of view, it’s reasonable to question how limited public funds should be prioritized.

But the Ministry’s plan does not mean installing air conditioners in every cell. It is aimed at providing basic protections in the spaces where heat-vulnerable inmates—older adults, people with disabilities, and the sick—are housed.

Prisons are, by definition, spaces of punishment. Still, because the state is detaining people, it retains the duty to safeguard their basic health and lives.

The key is not to respond emotionally to the question of “privilege” but to establish clear social standards that define the boundary between minimal protection and excessive support.

Extreme heat is dangerous to everyone, and correctional facilities are no exception.

Now is the time to move beyond polarized debate and develop reasonable standards and principles that the public can accept.

That approach would protect inmates’ rights while respecting public expectations.

(The CEN News) Jeongmi Ban, Reporter bjml1999@naver.com

Daniel Kim
content@tenbizt.com

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