News / National
Zanu PF MP wants prisoners' sperms exported
13 Feb 2016 at 08:26hrs | Views
Zanu PF MP for Chegutu Dexter Nduna has described the unemployed youths in his constituency as pollution which is resulting to an increase in number of people going to prisons and urged the government to extract and export sperms from prisoners to nations that are not endowed with either copulation ability or sex production.
Speaking in parliament Nduna said there are a lot of nations that are not endowed with productive human production - we can also - seeing that we are not short of that as a nation, we can also produce a sperm bank from our prison population and then export our sperms to nations that are not endowed with either copulation ability or sex with production," he said.
He said a lot of the laws have caused prisons to be so much polluted, in particular laws to do with the mining sector. 60% of Chegutu is populated by the youthful population.
"As long as we do not have the resuscitation of David Whitehead, the alignment of our laws and the inhibitive laws of the mining sector, a lot of our youths are going to find themselves in prison," Nduna said.
"One day I met a young man who is a prisoner at Chikurubi, he said to me, 'do you remember me,' I said no, I do not. He said 'when you were campaigning in 2013, I was one of those youngsters who was arrested for prospecting because I was gold digging in a sector, in an unlicenced place."
Nduna said the man said this is why he found himself being sentenced for 7 years imprisonment.
He said the man said "However, ndirikubuda next year, please go and tell my parents that next year I will be out of prison."
"As long as we do not change our laws which are archaic, moribund, historic and legacy-oriented Mr. Speaker Sir, a lot of Chegutu West youths are going to find themselves in prison. The youngsters will be subjected to those prison conditions and 60% of those will be from Chegutu," said Nduna.
"As I wind up, I need to add my voice on issues to do with technology. We need technology in our prison set up so that we do not subject our prisoners to dehumanising arrangements such as what the Hon. Gabbuza has spoken about. Whilst we go through our checkpoint at the Airport, we do not remove our clothes. We just remove our keys, laptops and such other things. We should have such machines for our prisoners and scanners so that we are not dehumanising them."
Nduna said the last word that he got when he was in the army is that every man is close to the door of prison.
"Murume wese wese aripedyo nemukova wejeri. We should be cognisant of that fact and be knowledgeable of that. We should change our laws and our set up in prison as well as our infrastructure, knowing that each and every one of us could be in jail one day," he said.
Speaking in parliament Nduna said there are a lot of nations that are not endowed with productive human production - we can also - seeing that we are not short of that as a nation, we can also produce a sperm bank from our prison population and then export our sperms to nations that are not endowed with either copulation ability or sex with production," he said.
He said a lot of the laws have caused prisons to be so much polluted, in particular laws to do with the mining sector. 60% of Chegutu is populated by the youthful population.
"As long as we do not have the resuscitation of David Whitehead, the alignment of our laws and the inhibitive laws of the mining sector, a lot of our youths are going to find themselves in prison," Nduna said.
"One day I met a young man who is a prisoner at Chikurubi, he said to me, 'do you remember me,' I said no, I do not. He said 'when you were campaigning in 2013, I was one of those youngsters who was arrested for prospecting because I was gold digging in a sector, in an unlicenced place."
Nduna said the man said this is why he found himself being sentenced for 7 years imprisonment.
He said the man said "However, ndirikubuda next year, please go and tell my parents that next year I will be out of prison."
"As long as we do not change our laws which are archaic, moribund, historic and legacy-oriented Mr. Speaker Sir, a lot of Chegutu West youths are going to find themselves in prison. The youngsters will be subjected to those prison conditions and 60% of those will be from Chegutu," said Nduna.
"As I wind up, I need to add my voice on issues to do with technology. We need technology in our prison set up so that we do not subject our prisoners to dehumanising arrangements such as what the Hon. Gabbuza has spoken about. Whilst we go through our checkpoint at the Airport, we do not remove our clothes. We just remove our keys, laptops and such other things. We should have such machines for our prisoners and scanners so that we are not dehumanising them."
Nduna said the last word that he got when he was in the army is that every man is close to the door of prison.
"Murume wese wese aripedyo nemukova wejeri. We should be cognisant of that fact and be knowledgeable of that. We should change our laws and our set up in prison as well as our infrastructure, knowing that each and every one of us could be in jail one day," he said.
Source - Byo24News