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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: Britain
Children's Society, top prisons inspector call for an end
to jailing children in Britain
By Julie Hyland
28 November 2000
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Britain's Chief Inspector of Prisons, Sir David Ramsbotham,
and the Children's Society have joined forces to call for an immediate
end to sending children to jail. Their appeal was made as a report
issued by the society said that prisons are acting as a warehouse
for the country's most damaged and troubled children.
England and Wales lock up more young people than any other
Western European country. In the past year the number of children
in custody rose by 11 percent to 3,000. The two countries also
have a lower age of criminal responsibility, 10 years, than almost
any other country on the continent, except Scotland where it is
set at eight years old. The Children's Society estimates that
more than half of those young people currently incarcerated in
the UK suffer from mental illness.
Over the last decade, juvenile policy in England and Wales
has been turned back hundreds of years, the society points out.
The Conservative government in 1994 initiated a "secure training
order", allowing the imprisonment of children between the
ages of 12 and 14 years old in secure training centres, reversing
an almost century long policy of moving children away from prison
custody.
In 1998, under the Blair Labour government, juvenile policy
was turned back almost 700 years when the 14th century principle
of doli incapaxestablishing that children between
10 and 13 years old were presumed to be incapable of criminal
intent unless proven otherwisewas abolished. This has allowed
"a 10 year old child, still in primary school to be regarded
as criminally responsible as a fully mature adult", the report
states.
By March 31 this year, 1,708 children were serving prison sentences
in England and Wales, not including those being held on remand
awaiting trial. This is the result of a more draconian sentencing
policy, which has seen the numbers of young people aged between
15 and 17 years old being imprisoned double between 1993 and 1998.
"During the same period the number of 15-17 year old boys,
as a proportion of the total population sentenced to custody more
than doubled, while the number of girls almost trebled. In addition,
a disproportionate number of black children are incarceratedmore
than six times the average.
The Children's Society's report makes a direct link between
social disadvantage and crime. At the time of their offending,
approximately 10 percent of those young people being held on remand
were homeless, it states, and 35 percent were not living with
either parent. More than 50 percent were not attending school
and 75 percent were already under the supervision of a local authority
or the youth justice system.
More than 50 percent of young prisoners on remand and 30 percent
of sentenced young offenders have a diagnosable mental disorder.
Between 1989-99, 18 young people committed suicide in young offenders
institutions. In just one year1998-99there were 944
recorded incidents of self-harm in young offenders' institutions.
These conditions are "intolerable for everyone concerned
with the welfare of young people and the right of victims to a
justice system which reduces the chance of reoffending",
the society states. The UK is now consistently breaching the United
Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child in a number of areas,
including the duty of government to use detention or imprisonment
as a last resort and children's rights to be protected "from
all forms of violence, abuse and neglect".
There can be no hope of rehabilitating young offenders under
these conditions, the report outlines. Not only is the cost of
imprisoning young people far higher than alternatives, such as
bail support schemes (£25,000 minimum per annum compared
with less than £2,000), it does not reduce reoffending.
Some 67 percent of young people released from secure training
centres have reoffended within 20 weeksa far higher failure
rate than other penal policies.
The Children's Society proposes the development of alternatives
to custody for young people, "to atone for any crimes by
working within the community. For the small number of young people
who are considered too much a risk to themselves or others, secure
children's homes can protect the public safety and provides the
resources and support that some young people need."
Ramsbotham echoed the Society's call for an immediate end to
remanding 15 and 16-year olds to prison. The continued neglect
of young offenders would set a "very dangerous trend",
he said.
The Prisons Inspectorate has repeatedly condemned conditions
for young people in custody. In a 1998 report on Werrington Youth
Offenders Institute, Ramsbotham said that he had never before
seen "such totally deliberate and unnecessary impoverishment
of children". An earlier report into Glen Parva prison was
not published after the Chief Inspector said he had been "appalled"
by the institute. In a report on Feltham Young Offenders InstituteEurope's
largest juvenile jail(earlier this year), the inspectorate
had described conditions as "rotten to the core" and
"unacceptable in a civilised country". Earlier this
month, Feltham inmate 20-year-old Robert Stewart a psychotic
racistwas convicted of brutally battering to death his 19-year-old
cellmate, Zahid Mubarak.
Last year, Ramsbotham had questioned whether Robert Thompson
and Jon Venables, imprisoned aged 11 years for the murder of two-year-old
Jamie Bulger in 1993, should be moved from secure accommodation
where they are currently being held to an adult jail. "I
would not wish them to go to some of the institutions I have seen,
" Ramsbotham told the New Statesman magazine. The
Chief Inspector immediately came under vociferous attack for his
remarks, from both Conservative and Labour politicians and was
forced to issue a humiliating apology following a sharply worded
intervention by Home Secretary Jack Straw.
See Also:
Two boys convicted of Jamie Bulger killing
apply for anonymity ruling
[25 November 2000]
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