Chairperson, we do risk-profiling of offenders, whether they are awaiting trial or they are sentenced offenders. As they come into our centres, we have what we call the offender rehabilitation path, where we check on all the sentences and everything that they have been sent to us for and make sure that we classify them correctly. That is the first thing. We have to classify them correctly and make sure that they are in a maximum security centre if they need to go there.
The second thing is that we have an anti-gang strategy that we are employing to try and crush the gangs which are operating in our prisons. That is something that we are all geared to with my officials, to make sure that we clean up on those. But those gangsters who don't seem to want to change or are totally cheeky and silly, we put aside and get officials who can look after them, because we cannot change them.
We are also declassifying certain maximum centres so that we know how much danger people will be exposed to in that maximum centre, and how many females will we put in there. My heart still goes out to those nurses, hon member. We have given their families support. There is also a settlement that we have reached with them. But, together with all the other officials, I take my hat off to those brave men and women who work under these difficult circumstances in our prisons.