Joke Collection Website - Bulletin headlines - Who can tell me what life in prison should be like for general economic crimes? What do you do and what are your living conditions like? Seek answers from those in the know

Who can tell me what life in prison should be like for general economic crimes? What do you do and what are your living conditions like? Seek answers from those in the know

Everyone in prison has uniform living conditions. The first three months of training are to introduce the rules. The specific work depends on which prison you are assigned to. It is different. It is basically processing and so on. It is convenient to do. Chopsticks, making clothes, etc. After going to prison, if you follow the organization's arrangements, you won't suffer too much and you can be reformed.

After arriving at the prison, prisoners are mainly required to work, study and clean. They can visit them once a month. If they reach the general management level, they can call their relatives once a month. Prisoners are not allowed to bring cash, and the money left by their relatives will be transferred to the prison. There is a card inside, which is similar to a campus meal card. Prison uniforms are issued in winter, spring, autumn and summer, which are uniform and free.

Each meal includes two dishes and one soup, and you need to be precise about how much meat you use. Rice, steamed buns, and noodles are enough. Family members can give you cotton-padded clothes to wear inside. The prison supermarket mainly sells cigarettes, drinks, candies, and food. wait.

Extended information

Explanation of reform-through-labour:

Reform-through-labour, referred to as reform-through-labour, is a system of the Communist Party of China and the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea. The criminal management methods used by socialist countries such as China were introduced from the former Soviet Union in the 1950s. A kind of slogans and slogans that often appear in prisons, using forced labor on inmates to achieve the purpose recognized by managers.

Re-education through labor and reeducation through labor are often confused in China and abroad. Chinese officials also refer to them collectively as "second labor", but the two are completely different. The latter is an administrative punishment system. (U.S. judicial agencies also allow prisoners to engage in forced work, but it is not called reform through labor.) In 2013, the full text of the decision of the Third Plenary Session of the 18th CPC Central Committee was released, proposing the abolition of the reeducation through labor system, which marked the development and improvement of China's legal system.

The Standing Committee of the National People's Congress, which concluded on December 28, 2013, passed a decision on the abolition of legal provisions on reeducation through labor, which means that the reeducation through labor system that has been in place for more than 50 years has been abolished in accordance with the law.