Ghana’s 60 percent fish deficit is unacceptably high, she said, and aquaculture offered a good avenue for changing the situation. She expressed the hope that the fish farms would provide the James Camp Prison with badly needed cash. The Ministry, she said, was also providing new Ahotor smoking ovens to enable the prisons to add value to their catch.
Mrs Patience Baffoe-Bonnie, deputy director of prisons, said James Camp would make aquaculture a major plank of its skills training programme for the inmates.
There are 45 prisons in Ghana, with an official capacity to hold 9,875 inmates, but the current prison population is 15,063, 2 percent of whom are women.
Although the Ghana Prisons Service owns substantial land assets, it has faced financial problems over the years. Apart from imparting skills to the inmates, the deployment of parts of this land in aquaculture is expected to provide the prisons with badly needed revenue.
Source: https://thefishsite.com/articles/prison-fish-farms-promised-across-ghana