Convicted rapists who are released on parole will be subject to electronic surveillance to prevent recidivism, and the monitoring devices are expected to be in place by the end of November, the Ministry of Justice said yesterday.
The ministry commissioned a high-tech company late last year to develop an electronic surveillance system to track rapists on parole. The first-phase testing on the system was completed in March this year, ministry officials said.
The second-phase testing is scheduled to begin by the middle of this month, they said, adding that the monitoring system would be formally launched at the end of November.
Under the new system, those released on parole after being convicted of a sexual crime will be required to wear the electronic monitors 24 hours a day.
Meanwhile, the ministry has also purchased three polygraph sets for testing parolees. The ministry has drafted training plans under which selected staff members will be trained in operating a polygraph -- a device which measures and records several physiological variables while a series of questions is being asked, in an attempt to detect lies.
The ministry will install lie-detectors in the north, central part and south of the country as part of efforts track parolee behavior, the officials said.
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