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How do detainees in detention centers eat?

Whether it is administrative detention or criminal detention, as long as you enter the detention center, no matter how long you are detained, you will face the problem of eating. A long time ago, detainees asked their families to deliver meals. It is difficult for family members to meet now, let alone deliver meals. The detention center has developed into a situation of food and shelter.

How do detainees in detention centers eat?

When you enter the detention center, you will get a small stool, two plastic bowls, plastic rice spoons, towels, plastic cups, toothbrushes, toothpaste and other basic daily necessities after physical examination, shaving and changing clothes. Then he was taken to the designated cell. Some detention centers take care of two meals, while others take care of three meals. It's time to manage three meals in a unified way.

Breakfast is usually at seven in the morning. Before breakfast, the bedding laid on Datong has been packed and put in the closet. The prisoners lined up in two rows and sat face to face on the bed board, with their bowls and spoons in front of them. After the small window near the cell door opened, everyone handed the bowls to the window in turn. A designated cellmate will pick up the food handed over from outside the cell one by one from the window. The general rule is to cook first, then cook. The food will be placed in front of everyone in a few minutes.

Then prison officials will patrol and bite as usual: Did everyone get food? All the prisoners answered in unison: all. The warden ordered: start eating. Then everyone began to eat. The procedure for Chinese food and dinner is the same. After dinner, according to the division of labor, there are people who specialize in tidying up the dishes. Some use towels to wipe the bed board and put the sorted bedding back. The redundant personnel stood by.

All food is distributed per capita (relatively fair), regardless of individual food intake. The staple food (steamed bread) is usually three or two for breakfast, half a catty for lunch and four or two for dinner. Non-staple food is mainly vegetable soup or pickles (less oil). After eating, I will face the wall and reflect on the "crimes" I have committed, and so on, until I receive the court's verdict. From then on, I bid farewell to the "detention center" and devoted myself to prison labor reform. From then on, he began his metamorphosis career of "grinding away the edge of tomorrow and forcing us to spend every day".

In a word, you can usually eat enough in it, but eating well is another matter. It's really hard to live a hard life without relatives in it. Even if you have relatives in it, you will eat the same thing every day. After all, staying in the detention center for just a few months, staying for more than a year or even a few years, eating these things repeatedly every day will be very tired, and the most important thing is that you will lose your inner freedom.